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Re: [ARSCLIST] Rock and roll drumming
It is confusing for sure. But strangely enough David Amram who is  
perhaps a bit more technically sophisticated than Bob Z. seems to  
have had a similar revelation.
He was jamming with some jazz musicians as the post-bop period was  
under way. He was not a sophisticated pianist and a guy who's name  
eludes me suggested that a way to voice more sophisticated chords  
without having a great deal of technique was to play a given chord  
(G7) and then double the third and the seventh
degree of the chord again in the other hand. Neat trick, but I have  
no idea what this has to do with the triplet issue...just a thought.
AA
On Mar 31, 2006, at 6:14 AM, Eric Goldberg wrote:
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
I have never thought of Bob Dylan as one of music's great  
theorists, and now I know why. His technical description is at  
least as confusing as some of his lyrics, which at least had the  
advantae of being obscure in a poetic way.
What I was describing in the drumming discussion was rhythmic, not  
melodic. q  e
Eric