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Thread: Where does guitar improvisation come from?

  1. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by rcwilk View Post
    I was shocked to find out BlueGrass is not an old rootsy form of music, but pretty much invented recently mid last century.
    Prepare to be shocked again? That's inaccurate.

    The term "bluegrass" to describe the style of music originated in the middle of the last century (likely due to the association with the great Bill Monroe). The music itself is a derivative of "old time" music and is most assuredly a very old form of American roots music.

    Also, I don't mean to blow off the rest of your answer as you're clearly putting thought into this discussion. I'm just hung up on the idea of a course in "Rock n Roll" getting a piece of American roots music history so fundamentally wrong. I shudder to think what (if anything) the course says about New Orleans jazz.

    All of which is to say I will process the rest of what you asked and try to answer that as well. I have to say, I do enjoy this thread. My two favorite discussions here this week have been about improv and Miles' 70s electric bands. The venn diagram on that one has a HUGE crossover section.

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    I am not sure what the topic is any more...

    But I believe that the harder the instrument is to play, the harder it is to master, which leads to it becoming harder to improvise on. It's easy to make up a melody on the fly with your voice. That's improvising. Try doing that on the bassoon.

    Some instrument like the guitar has been around a long time. Way back, it was not used for improvising so much. I think that's because improvisation wasn't something musicians strived for. Mozart and Bach weren't known for their long jam sessions! Before the 1900s, wasn't music mostly composed all the way? Compared to the world of blues & jazz that later came.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Robert View Post
    I am not sure what the topic is any more...
    The topic has become as amorphous as good improv music.

    Some of you that know my strongest influences by now had to expect I'd have perhaps far too much fun with this thread.

    Turn an Albert Ayler obsessive loose in a thread about improv and watch the tangents fly.

    Of course, if it doesn't all come back around again in the end, I'd do that particular hero of mine an injustice.

    Quote Originally Posted by Robert View Post
    Before the 1900s, wasn't music mostly composed all the way? Compared to the world of blues & jazz that later came.
    Western classical music perhaps. Indian classical music (at least the Hindustani strain) is not through-composed and features a reliance on both structure and improvisation.

    That's what I was getting at earlier when I suggested the sitar may be the exception to your "simpler instrument leads to more improv" theory. Like I said, few people would claim it's easy to play a sitar, yet improvisation has been a key element of its play further back than Western classical music or the countries in which it originated.

    Also, there are thousands more traditional African styles I don't know than ones I do, but the ones I am familiar with also place some emphasis on improvisation. Unless I'm mistaken, this is where "call and response" originates, a technique still prevalent among improvisers on all instruments, and the most tangible example of Spud's "improv is a conversation" line of thinking (which, by the way, I agree with entirely).

    How this entered into American music takes us right to the Delta and New Orleans. The rest you should know.

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    Quote Originally Posted by R_of_G View Post
    Seems to me this is the whole point of playing. Think about it less and enjoy it more.
    In the tech world we refer to an old saying, "Paralysis through analysis."

    I've not posted anything because my answer to the question(s) is, "Just play. The rest will sort itself out." I know, that's not helpful. I prefer to keep it simple and play the groove, similar to soul surfing.

    This is just my philosophy, not bashing the thread. There have been several wonderful analogies, viewpoints, and useful ideas presented that I won't diminish for a second.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Spudman View Post
    When I think of soloing/improvising I think of having a conversation. You need to know basic sentence structure to communicate, which I liken to the chords or form of the song. The notes, or scalar parts, are like words. You get to choose what order to put them in to convey what you want to say. Move a note/word and it changes the message. When you know the language you can then handle any conversation/improv session.

    Want to learn a new language, a different way of expressing yourself? Refer to Robert's list. Number 3 is listen, listen, listen. Then start incorporating those words, or phrases, into your own new language sentences.

    That, and finger dancing, is how I view improvisation.
    This is exacty how I see things too.

    I try to "converse" in my playing to whatever extent the music allow me to.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Robert View Post
    I am not sure what the topic is any more...

    But I believe that the harder the instrument is to play, the harder it is to master, which leads to it becoming harder to improvise on. It's easy to make up a melody on the fly with your voice. That's improvising. Try doing that on the bassoon.

    Some instrument like the guitar has been around a long time. Way back, it was not used for improvising so much. I think that's because improvisation wasn't something musicians strived for. Mozart and Bach weren't known for their long jam sessions! Before the 1900s, wasn't music mostly composed all the way? Compared to the world of blues & jazz that later came.
    I heard a story about Chopin, (and my stories don't seem to be very accurate, so, grain of salt) that he would improv away, and then every once in awhile stop and try to write those notes down, typically frustrating himself to pieces.

    Beethoven, I heard was challenged once during a party to a contest, and he kept putting the guy off, and putting the guy off, but he was persistent to compete. The challenger played his masterpiece, but Beethoven kept talking with his friends, though he sat down and with one hand did variations on the challengers masterpiece without breaking his conversation, and winning the contest.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tig View Post
    In the tech world we refer to an old saying, "Paralysis through analysis."

    I've not posted anything because my answer to the question(s) is, "Just play. The rest will sort itself out." I know, that's not helpful. I prefer to keep it simple and play the groove, similar to soul surfing.

    This is just my philosophy, not bashing the thread. There have been several wonderful analogies, viewpoints, and useful ideas presented that I won't diminish for a second.
    Ha ha, yes MLK used to say that about the Kennedy administration, Analysis is Paralysis. But for fun, I counter with Neitzsche's quote, "there are no data, only interpretations" which indicates that all acts are acts of analysis.

    Probably a better Neitzsche quote, though thinly relevant " Life without music would be a mistake"
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    Quote Originally Posted by R_of_G View Post
    Prepare to be shocked again? That's inaccurate.

    The term "bluegrass" to describe the style of music originated in the middle of the last century (likely due to the association with the great Bill Monroe). The music itself is a derivative of "old time" music and is most assuredly a very old form of American roots music.

    Also, I don't mean to blow off the rest of your answer as you're clearly putting thought into this discussion. I'm just hung up on the idea of a course in "Rock n Roll" getting a piece of American roots music history so fundamentally wrong. I shudder to think what (if anything) the course says about New Orleans jazz.
    I can't say the teacher totally convinced me, and maybe why I unconsciously posted that as an example, hoping some other views would emerge. He did identify Bill Monroe as the culprit, and then the split off folks in Bill's group the Blue Grass Boys, Earl Scruggs and oh now I'm gonna flunk the test -- someone Flatt? Ahh, thank goodness for Wiki, Lester Flatt. But surely Monroe can't be the only bottleneck in that musical trend? Some research probably needed here.

    What is "Miles' 70s electric bands" sounds interesting. Like Miles Davis?
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    I don't know about origins, history, theory, etc., but I do know one thing - a LOT of guitar "improvisation" is mostly comprised of popular, common and highly recycled licks.

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    Quote Originally Posted by rcwilk View Post
    I can't say the teacher totally convinced me...
    By far the best answer. But hey, now you looked some of it up and know more than you did before so it was all a worthwhile endeavor.

    Quote Originally Posted by rcwilk View Post
    What is "Miles' 70s electric bands" sounds interesting. Like Miles Davis?
    Yup, Miles Davis. Tig and I had been discussing some of his 70s electric funk-rock bands in the Now Playing thread. Interviews with his players of the period (John McLaughlin, Pete Cosey, Chick Corea, Dave Holland, Herbie Hancock, Keith Jarrett, et al) provide an endless amount of discussion on the nature of improvisation.

    Quote Originally Posted by Tig View Post
    I've not posted anything because my answer to the question(s) is, "Just play. The rest will sort itself out." I know, that's not helpful.
    On the contrary, I think it's quite helpful as it simplifies the answer to something a player of any skill level can comprehend.

    When my neighbor (the bass player) and I would first play together or even hang out and talk music, he often asked some form of the question "what am I supposed to play if the band is playing _________?"

    My answer never changed and it never will. There's no such thing as "supposed to." If it's not right, you'll hear it.

    Of course, rather than just leaving it a Zen riddle for the guy, I've tried to expose him to some bass players and styles he didn't know before. It's helping him see that there can be an infinite number of approaches to "what do I play when they play _______?"

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bookkeeper's Son View Post
    I don't know about origins, history, theory, etc., but I do know one thing - a LOT of guitar "improvisation" is mostly comprised of popular, common and highly recycled licks.
    Perhaps therein lies the difference between improv and jamming/soloing?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bookkeeper's Son View Post
    I don't know about origins, history, theory, etc., but I do know one thing - a LOT of guitar "improvisation" is mostly comprised of popular, common and highly recycled licks.
    Hey that might make a fun song based on Wonderful World

    Don't know much about im-prov-i-sation
    Playin chords or song im-i-tation ...
    Don't know much about tabs and notes,
    Don't know much about songs Dylan wrote.

    But what I do know is I love to play
    This old guitar and the songs it say
    Nothing to fret about now all day.
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  13. #51
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    Default Where does guitar improvisation come from?

    To me it is all about the guitar singing. I look back to Louis Armstrong and his horn playing interspersed with his scat singing. The horn and voice emulated each other. And it is an early example of "soloing" by an instrumentalist. Sometimes the scat and playing was more staccato and other times, like "wonderful world", more conventionally phrased.

    So I like to emulate the horn players and have my guitar take the place of the voice in the song. And I like to consider the call and response, question and answer aspects as well.

    Of course my improvisation is much more conventional than the stuff R_of_G is talking about. But I do think a lot of improv comes from those early jazz roots.
    Steve Thompson
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    Quote Originally Posted by sunvalleylaw View Post
    Of course my improvisation is much more conventional than the stuff R_of_G is talking about. But I do think a lot of improv comes from those early jazz roots.
    Thanks. This makes me wonder, has someone classified different styles of improvisation on the guitar? ie are there 'schools' of improvisation that break down into various trends and techniques? Or has the game always been one of personal expression and individual exploration?
    Richard Wilkerson | dreamgate.com

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    Default Where does guitar improvisation come from?

    I would say from the player's perspective, the latter. I would think some scholar or pundit somewhere may have classified things, but would think that most players find their inspirations and then express themselves individually.

    I am not aware of a scholar or author who has done such a classification but I am willing to bet there is such a book or article somewhere. But again, I doubt it would be written by a very significant artist. Just my guess.
    Steve Thompson
    Sun Valley, Idaho


    Guitars: Fender 60th Anniversary Std. Strat, Squier CVC Tele Hagstrom Viking Semi-hollow, Joshua beach guitar, Martin SPD-16TR Dreadnought
    Amphs: Peavey Classic 30, '61 Fender Concert
    Effects and such: Boss: DS-1, CE-5, NS-2 and RC20XL looper, Digitech Bad Monkey, Korg AX1G Multi-effects, Berhinger: TU100 tuner, PB100 Clean Boost, Line 6 Toneport UX2, Electro Harmonix Little Big Muff Pi, DuhVoodooMan's Rabid Rodent Rat Clone, Zonkin Yellow Screamer Mk. II, MXR Carbon Copy Delay


    love is the answer, at least for most of the questions in my heart. . .
    - j. johnson

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