Jamie Taylor's "A Guide to Practical Comping - Part One"


Published on 27 January 2016
Jamie's Class: http://mikesclass.es/practicalcomping1 Jamie's Master Page: http://mikesclass.es/jamietaylor Get a FREE class Now: http://mikesclass.es/freeclass Excerpts from Jamie's class available at www.mikesmasterclasses.com The art of jazz guitar accompaniment, and the study of chords in general, can be daunting topics, especially if you're new to the style. That's why this lesson dives straight in with the essentials; it's full of devices that you can go out and use on your next gig. The focus here isn't on complicated harmonic theory; it's all about getting stuck in to the basic changes of well-known standards, and giving them a sprinkling of the magic dust! During almost 90 mins of easily digestible material, we learn all sorts of tips and tricks that the pros use to make their accompaniments sparkle. Even if you've never comped a set of jazz chord changes before, this video gives you all the tools you need to emulate greats like Joe Pass, Freddie Green, Bucky Pizzarelli, and Martin Taylor. No need to worry about struggling to keep up either - every concept we cover is broken down slowly and notated fully (including tablature) on the accompanying PDF. There's plenty to keep the more experienced player occupied too... Topics covered include: • Quickly build a rock-solid foundation of basic jazz shapes. • Add passing chords to basic progressions to keep them moving. • Introduction to moving inner parts. • 'Freddie Green' style 4-to-the-bar comping. What shapes to use, what technique to use, how to get that sound! • Martin Taylor/Joe Pass style bass line comping. The class includes a complete chorus of this over "All The Things You Are", played slowly and fully tabbed out on the PDF. • Voice leading through common progressions -- all over the guitar. • Combine voicings with scales, to make exciting chord/melody phrases. Finally, the class comes complete with a 13-page PDF booklet (including standard notation and tablature), plus synchronised on-screen captions, so you know exactly where you are at all times.