| Practice
This! is an educational project of Earshot Jazz with
sponsorship from The Seattle Drum School. Each month
in Earshot Jazz a new lesson by a different
local jazz artist will appear for students to learn
from and for non-musician readers to gain insight
into the craft of improvising.
Practice
This!
January 2007
Rick Mandyck on "Shape
Shifting"
Click
here to listen and download audio clips
of Rick playing examples of these ideas.
Guitarist
Rick Mandyck has been a mainstay of the Seattle music
scene since he arrived here in 1978. His career has
had many incarnations in the past 25 years as have
his musical collaborations. He has recorded or performed
with a who’s who of local musicians including
Barbara Donald, Burt Wilson, Gregg Keplinger, John
Bishop, and Hans Teuber, as well as Mark Murphy, The
Elvis Show, Billy Hart, and the late Carter Jefferson.
His ability to create intensity while improvising
is legendary. In this edition of Practice This! Rick
talks about how he practices what he calls “Shape
Shifting,” or developing a solo.
One
of the most exciting things you can experience as
musician or as a listener is a great improviser developing
a solo from very small ideas and elaborating on them
to create a full and complete story, a journey that
the improviser takes you on. What I practice are the
elements that you can use to create that intensity,
or to tell the story, or to change things from one
vibe to another. There are basically four elements
I use to develop as solo:
– The touch or tone (or sound) of the instrument
– Phrasing, going from simple to very complex
– Harmony, again from simple to complex
– Register, from low to high
The
touch or breath can be an electronic effect on guitar
or varying the airspeed of a wind instrument –
anything to alter the color of the sound. You can
practice using a very flat or normal sound in the
beginning of a solo and gradually changing the color
of the sound to make it more intense. You can also
use dynamics to achieve a similar effect. In practicing
phrasing, I start out playing over a tune using very
simple (almost child-like) melodies and work on developing
them into across the bar-line phrases, phrases that
last longer that one bar or phrases that end on odd
beats. With harmony, it’s much easier. You can
begin a solo with very straight chords, and playing
“inside.” Then you can work on gradually
altering the harmony, or using substitutions to bring
the vibe up. The same is true with the pitch. Practice
staying out of the upper register of the instrument
until you need to create excitement in the solo. Going
from low to high is one of the easiest ways to create
excitement.
All
of these things, of course, depend on the rhythm section
being receptive to them. But if and when it all comes
together, there is nothing more fun or more exciting
than a soloist and the rhythm section taking you on
a journey. It’s just about the most fun you
can have standing up!
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