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Re: [ARSCLIST] Rock and roll drumming
Eric -
Perhaps you or someone else could help elucidate a mysterious passage from
Bob Dylan's "Chronicles: Part 1" where he writes about a revolutionary
system taught to him by Lonnie Johnson, the great blues and jazz guitarist.
Dylan writes (p. 157) that his guitarmanship was electrified in the 1980s
when he learned how to play "based on an odd- instead of even-number
system" that he learned from jazzman Lonnie Johnson: a "highly controlled
system of playing and relates to the notes of a scale, how they combine
numerically, how they form melodies out of triplets..."
"Popular music is usually based on the number 2 [...] If you're using an
odd numerical system, things that strengthen a performance begin to happen
[...] In a diatonic scale there are eight notes, in a pentatonic scale
there are five. If you're using the first scale, and you hit 2, 5 and 7 to
the phrase and then repeat it, a melody forms. Or you can use the 2 three
times. Or you can use 4 once and 7 twice [...] The possibilities are
endless [...] I'm not a numerologist. I don't know why the number 3 is more
metaphysically powerful than the number 2, but it is. Passion and
enthusiasm, which sometimes can be enough to sway a crowd, aren't even
necessary. You can manufacture faith out of nothing and there are an
infinite number of patterns and lines that connect from key to key..."
Is this a baffling to you as it seems to me?
Russ Hamm
The major change from the swing feel was from the triplet feel on the
quarter to the straight eighths. Feel is very, very, very, very, very
important which explains why the Bo Diddley rhythm, although it is notated
exactly like clave, feels so completely different from the "son montuno".
If everything I wrote in this last paragraph doesn't make sense to anyone,
then all I can do is quote Fats Waller as he left the bandstand and was
asked what jazz was. He replied, "Lady, if you don't know by now, don't
mess with it".
Eric Goldberg
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Russ Hamm
Ed Tech Specialist
National School District (http://nsd.us)
San Diego County, California
tel. (619) 336-7752
FAX (619) 336-7551