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Soulman
Forum Senior Member
Joined: January 22 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 290
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Topic: Were Jammin Posted: April 02 2005 at 01:39 |
Hey there ,
Well thus ends another fancy day of school time and then going to my
friends place and jamming out with the good ol' guitars. Unfortunately
with a lack of a drummer, we have to compensate by one of us playing
rhythm and the other soloing, then some prog like riffs etc etc.
I'd like to hear some advice from you top-notch musicians on the art of
"jamming out." Also any awesome jam outs you've had and can elaborate
on.
Much appreciation.
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Ankaret
Forum Groupie
Joined: March 28 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 82
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 01:48 |
I jam out a lot, especially since I play in a jazz band at school, which often does songs that just have huge solo sections. But when I jam out with my real band which used to play kinda progressive death metal and now is really lost, we always jammed out to some real blues rock sorta stuff like Rainbow's "Catch the Rainbow" and stuff like that, it always ended up sounding real bluesy because I think the musical genre is clearly the most prone to jamming. But yes, without a good drummer to constantly change the "feel" of the jam, it tends to get boring like with two guitars and no keyboards or anything, but it's pretty entertaining for a while nonetheless. Instead I like to leave solo sections in songs which sorta concentrate a certain sort of jamming in each song rather than just straight out anything goes kinda stuff which can get out of control. Though another cover jam that my band does for fun is Paranoid by Black Sabbath, which is just a blast hehe.
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Links to musical projects coming soon!!!
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Sweetnighter
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 24 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1298
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 01:59 |
jam = jazz improv soloing + rock groove
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I bleed coffee. When I don't drink coffee, my veins run dry, and I shrivel up and die.
"Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso? Is that like the bank of Italian soccer death or something?" -my girlfriend
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Ankaret
Forum Groupie
Joined: March 28 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 82
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 12:10 |
Sometimes I think jazz musicians get so bored, they totally forget that they're supposed to be playing music in their search for entertaining themselves. The other day I was at a record store and they were playing some jazz record which was playing "So What" at like 500 BPM, it sounded absolutely ridiculous and 100% un-musical, just sounded like jibber jab, it took me like 2 minutes to even recognize the song.
Honestly, jazz is good for jamming, but unless you've got a real good rhythm section and saxophone players and trumpets etc that can REALLY play, it gets boring. Funner for a guitarist to jam on blues methinks.
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Links to musical projects coming soon!!!
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 12:13 |
Nah, I think blues would get too harmonically restricting after a while. That's from a bass player, though.
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Sweetnighter
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 24 2004
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 1298
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 12:24 |
Ankaret wrote:
Sometimes I think jazz musicians get so bored, they
totally forget that they're supposed to be playing music in their
search for entertaining themselves. The other day I was at a record
store and they were playing some jazz record which was playing "So
What" at like 500 BPM, it sounded absolutely ridiculous and 100%
un-musical, just sounded like jibber jab, it took me like 2 minutes to
even recognize the song.
Honestly, jazz is good for jamming, but unless you've got a real
good rhythm section and saxophone players and trumpets etc that can
REALLY play, it gets boring. Funner for a guitarist to jam on
blues methinks. |
I know what you're talking about... as the sixties wore on, Miles and
team kept speeding that tune up, to further challenge themselves. One
thing jazz composers never did well was compose pieces that provided
enough interesting compositional material to balance the jamming
sections. The "head-solo-head" pattern is so tiring! I think thats one
of many reasons why jazz artists got interested in the early rock scene
and moved into that concept of music and thus gave birth to the fusion
movement. I play in my school's jazz combo, and we play pieces from the
60s period non-stop... i'm surprised I don't fall asleep while i'm
soloing sometimes... at least i have the freedom to do what I want I
guess... it just doesn't keep the interest level up. (I play trombone
by the way)
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I bleed coffee. When I don't drink coffee, my veins run dry, and I shrivel up and die.
"Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso? Is that like the bank of Italian soccer death or something?" -my girlfriend
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Ankaret
Forum Groupie
Joined: March 28 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 82
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 13:15 |
Cool, yeah I play in my school's jazz band as well, though Im the guitar player, so you can imagine how boring it is to play those (usually) lame rhythms and then have to solo over it time after time. I mean some jazz stuff keeps it quite interesting, for instance we played Maynard Ferguson's Fireshaker once, that was a lot of fun, but then again, it wasn't really jazz, more like funky fusion. I don't know, it just seems that most jazz tries to be unpredictable to the point of it reversing on itself and you (as a musician) being able to predict the direction of the song after all. I really don't know what my problem is with jazz, but it's just not my favorite musical genre.
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Links to musical projects coming soon!!!
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: April 02 2005 at 16:50 |
I see what you mean about the head-solo-head thing, but there's plenty with more complex structure (don't ask me what, since I've only really scratched the surface myself, but there really is some )
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