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#119418 - 09/04/06 05:52 PM
Re: Let's talk about Rhythm
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Member
Registered: 05/08/06
Posts: 464
Loc: Southeastern PA, USA
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I don't know about the dance/music connection. I guess it makes sense. As a pianist I have found the playing hand percussion instruments has been a helpful diversion for exploring rhythmic ideas. However, good hard work is many times the solution. Count it out, break it up into small pieces, start slow, and build up speed. Not always fun but usually effective.
I don't agree that if you don't have rhythm you're lost, since it can't be taught. I know an acoustic guitar player that just couldn't get a jazz waltz feel. I wasn't able to effectively instruct her on what to do. Fortunately, the drummer in the band was also a talented school band director and had just the trick for teaching a jazz waltz feel. Just say the following phrase over and over again "who PARKED the car"
For 5/4 just add baby "who PARKED the car, ba-by"
Try it, it works.
Scott's swing waltz + duple is technically correct. However, it's the little tricks that make the difference.
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#119423 - 09/04/06 07:55 PM
Re: Let's talk about Rhythm
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Member
Registered: 09/30/04
Posts: 519
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Originally posted by tony mads usa: ...... I do think that being a vocalist (to a limited degree) helps me considerably with my playing, as I think I play a tune as I would sing it ... t.
Tony, I think your accordion background contributes to a lot of your (and other players too) rhythm and timimg capabilities. If you take a minute to think of whats going on in each measure of a song that you play on the accordion, you can't help but to increase your rhythm and timing functions. Left + right hands are playing 2 different things, but there's no sound, no music without physically pushing/pulling the bellows back and forth. So you simultaneously maintain that control (in timing/rhythm) the positioning of the bellows, otherwise the volume level is too loud or too soft, OR, no sound at all because you just ran the bellows shut. After you have developed that coordination (timing/rhythm) you work on accenting your music. Again, 2 different parts being played at the same time with only 1 source of accent control, the bellows. Your rhythm develops to a higher level thru this training because you develop techniques to get your fingers off the treble keys for a split moment so you can accent a bass passage and vice versa. The hand learns to become quicker than the ear (of the listener) After playing a few years, this becomes automatic, mechanical without thinking about it. Hence, rhythm and timing thru training.
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#119424 - 09/04/06 11:55 PM
Re: Let's talk about Rhythm
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/22/04
Posts: 1457
Loc: Athens, Greece
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You guys should get money for this kind of info you provide here for free.
After reading the thread yesterday morning, I thought about it and decided I have to correct that problem. Last night I realised that most of the time, on a particular distortion guitar solo I like to play, I am playing a little faster than I should, so in every 1-2 meters I have to slightly "correct" myself, and it showed in the recording.
And then Diki hit the nail in the head and I know one of the main reasons why, at least one that I can control. My distortion guitar patch dominates everything.
The "dancing with head and feet and hands" thing I do for years now, (never heard it before, just came out naturally) and it was nice to confirm that it actually helps. Thank you all, this is what this forum is about. Theodore
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#119426 - 09/05/06 06:47 AM
Re: Let's talk about Rhythm
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Member
Registered: 03/20/01
Posts: 847
Loc: Nashvville TN
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Well, unless I'm not getting this, a lot of these responses are again talking about timing as opposed to rhythm. The 5/4 stuff is definitely about rhythm, but this stuff about dancing or moving or playing a solo a little too fast is more about timing. To me rhythm is about keeping the bars lined up. For instance, I hear demos of people who lose the rhythm and somehow start playing the melody on the 3 of the bar instead of the 1. So suddenly the measure is going 3 4 1 2 instead of 1 2 3 4. I mean, the timing is there, in that the person is staying with the beat, he's just on the wrong beat.
I was doing a demo for someone and he was a very basic guitar player. Well, he'd written this song not even knowing that he was switching from 3.4 to 4.4. He'd just "strum strum strum strum" the guitar, and sing along with it, and that strum strum was very steady, but he was just all over the place as far as beats per measure. I'd say he had timing, much as a metranome has timing, click click click, but he had no rhythm.
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