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#505632 - 05/16/22 10:51 AM Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4
montunoman Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3208
Loc: Dallas, Texas

Within the 8 points in 4/4, I really love the "and" of 2& 4. Those points give an expanding and a leaning forward type of feeling to the music. That's what I feel anyways, when listening to a song like Miles Davis  "Four".  Another good  example is the way Red Garland often comps. He can  play several measures just playing his left hand  on the "and" of 2 & 4. which seems to propel his beautiful right lines forward. 

 

Check out his rendition of "C Jam Blues"  Pay close attention to his left hand comping during his solo. 

 

 

I have always just let my left fall where it wants when soloing with a rhythm section backing me up, and I never tried playing a more static pattern like Red Garland often did. Well, it turns out that it harder than I thought! I am having to go back to basic right hand lines that I already know, very slowly, stumble around, and work out the coordination. I am hoping eventually my left hand will go on autopilot, but until then I am feeling like a beginner. I guess that's the great thing about our instrument- there's always something new to learn, but I can't help but wonder, did Red Garland have workout the coordination or did it just come natural to him? 

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#505634 - 05/16/22 02:56 PM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: montunoman]
cgiles Offline
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Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
Paul, I don't think anything "comes natural", I think it "BEcomes natural" with enough practice. Bass lines are more natural to me but that's from years of playing jazz organ. Still, left hand comping on either piano or organ, feels pretty 'natural' to me because it not only provides the harmonic structure but (in the right hands) also contributes to the rhythmic feel. In a piano/bass/drum trio, it IS the 'rhythm guitar'. I tend to like the strong rhythmic players like Les McCann (who just happens to be a friend of our own Capt Russ - from same hometown). Great topic though, and certainly a weak area for a lot of keyboard players.

chas
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#505635 - 05/16/22 04:27 PM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: montunoman]
Bill Lewis Offline
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Registered: 11/12/08
Posts: 2441
Loc: Bluffton/Hilton Head SC USA
Erroll Garner had a great driving LH to replace a guitar. The LH is often neglected but some masters can coordinate some great rhythms with it and the RH.
Interesting topic here as I think most Arranger players just hold chords with the LH. Playing an Arranger like a piano can be a lot of fun and I occasionally do it that way just for myself
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#505637 - 05/17/22 01:23 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: montunoman]
Bernie9 Offline
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Registered: 09/21/02
Posts: 5507
Loc: Port Charlotte,FL,USA
I consider myself somewhere in the middle between Chas and many that simply use the left hand to designate chords. Chas is right about LH comping being a learned process. I started when I played organ only, and needed some sort of rhythmic movement. I started with simple 9th,aug, 8th, and experimented. I started to learn running bass lines, but no cigar. I have started to use more piano for LH, and this is where it really comes in handy. Everything is a learning process, but one has to keep at it.
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#505638 - 05/17/22 05:54 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: cgiles]
montunoman Offline
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Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3208
Loc: Dallas, Texas
Originally Posted By cgiles
Paul, I don't think anything "comes natural", I think it "BEcomes natural" with enough practice.
chas


Thanks Chas, good insight. I've been practicing my "ands" of 2&4 and it's getting there little by little. I feel like a kid learning to riding a bike. I get going and sometimes lose my balance and fall on my backside, but so far I haven't broken anything! I guess if everything was easy, maybe music would be boring for me? Anyways, the great thing about our artform is that there is always something new to learn, and polish what we already know.
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#505639 - 05/17/22 06:00 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: Bill Lewis]
montunoman Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3208
Loc: Dallas, Texas
Originally Posted By Bill Lewis
Erroll Garner had a great driving LH to replace a guitar. The LH is often neglected but some masters can coordinate some great rhythms with it and the RH.
Interesting topic here as I think most Arranger players just hold chords with the LH. Playing an Arranger like a piano can be a lot of fun and I occasionally do it that way just for myself


Yes, Erroll Garner had a beautiful quarter note flow in his left hand, kind of reminds of Count Baisie's guitar player Freddie Greene.

Yes, arranger keyboard can put extreme musical restriction on our left hand. That's why I am absolutely thrilled to finally have a chord looper/sequencer on my Yamaha SX900. That alone made it a worthwhile upgrade from the 950 for me. Total game changer!
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It not the keyboard, it's the keyboardist.

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#505640 - 05/17/22 06:24 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: Bernie9]
montunoman Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 10/20/09
Posts: 3208
Loc: Dallas, Texas
Originally Posted By Bernie9
I consider myself somewhere in the middle between Chas and many that simply use the left hand to designate chords. Chas is right about LH comping being a learned process. I started when I played organ only, and needed some sort of rhythmic movement. I started with simple 9th,aug, 8th, and experimented. I started to learn running bass lines, but no cigar. I have started to use more piano for LH, and this is where it really comes in handy. Everything is a learning process, but one has to keep at it.


Bernie, I would like to encourage you to not give up walking bass. I know, it's really hard. It's taken me years to get to the point where I can walk a bass line over a jazz/ blues progression with turn arounds while my right hand improvises.

I'd recommend to start the basic I, IV V ( 3 chord blues) and learn some basic boogie left hand patterns and just play chords in the right hand. Once that is solid start adding some easy melodies, like C Jam Blues. Another tip I can give you is play a walking bass line and sing what you right would be playing with the right hand. It's a good way to trick the brain so the coordination comes a bit easier.

My goal is to walk bass lines in my LH, while the RH plays melodies and improvises over standards like "All The Things You are" "Autumn Leaves " but I'm still a long way from that goal, but I'm such a stubborn/ hardheaded bastard that the only thing that will stop me is death or some kind of illness, hopefully none of things happen too soon!


Edited by montunoman (05/17/22 06:33 AM)
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#505643 - 05/17/22 07:22 PM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: montunoman]
Diki Offline


Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14182
Loc: NW Florida
Another word for the ‘and’ is the ‘swing factor’, a much missed (at least by me!) feature on earlier, simpler arrangers and drum machines.

There was so much ‘groove’ you could impart to a straight style by just a few percentage points of slight swing to the groove. Not enough to hear, just enough to ‘feel’..!

As with most music, the best stuff is the space BETWEEN the notes, not the notes themselves. It’s not what you play, it’s what you DON’T play! 🎹😎
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#505644 - 05/18/22 05:14 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: Diki]
organgrinder Offline
Member

Registered: 07/05/16
Posts: 347
Loc: ft. lauderdale, florida
Right. A famous quote from Count Basie.
Mel
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#505645 - 05/18/22 05:52 AM Re: Red Garland- the "and " of 2&4 [Re: montunoman]
cgiles Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
I think you can achieve that 'swing feel' without the help of the arranger by the way you play OVER the STRAIGHT beat. In fact, to ME, it sounds more natural that way. JMO though. Everybody feels 'groove' differently, some people, not at all. My poor wife was that way. You could set a metronome by her playing but she had no feel for 'groove' ('feel', 'syncopation', whatever) at all (and she was good enough to play in the Philadelphia Summer Orchestra - that was the Philadelphia Orchestra without the First chairs). It MAY not be teachable. It could be one of those things where you either feel it or you don't. If you don't, then maybe that's where that machine-generated 'swing factor' could be useful. Hmmm, wonder why they dropped it as a feature?

chas
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