5 Ways to Play Like Chick Corea

April 27, 2017 | Author: magicomico77 | Category: N/A
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5 Ways To Play Like Chick Corea BY ANDY LAVERNE June 30, 2011

For over five decades, Chick Corea has inspired and delighted legions of fans and musical disciples. Like his former employer Miles Davis, he can’t be pigeonholed. Chick’s musical endeavors span from Mozart to Monk. Any musical situation Corea participates in contains a strong, immediately identifiable creative core. I can say from my personal experience playing piano duets with him that his energy and openness are contagious and inspiring. The following concepts are just the tip of the iceberg, but if you incorporate them into your own playing, you’ll be channeling Chick’s core.

1. Pentatonics and Quartal Voicings

Ex. 1a illustrates five-note scales that Chick often incorporates into many of his right hand lines. The quartal (fourth-based) left-hand structures are signature chords that compliment the pentatonic scales.

Ex. 1b demonstrates how Chick sometimes anchors his quartal voicings with those constructed from roots and fifths.

Ex. 1c is a right-hand pentatonic-based line with a signature Corea stamp: the grace note.

Ex. 1d puts all these components into action. Check out Chick’s album Now He Sings, Now He Sobs for more examples.

2. Comping

Ex. 2a illustrates how Chick’s accompanying is so compelling that it can work as solo piano. Again, notice his frequent use of quartal voicings.

In Ex. 2b, Chick uses diminished structures, built from second inversion triads in the right hand over quartal voicings in the left.

Ex. 2c uses quartal structures underneath right major triads. Many of these comping techniques can be heard on Chick’s arresting album Three Quartets.

3. Single Note Lines

In Ex. 3a, Chick uses a melodic line in the tradition of Bebop pioneer Bud Powell (a major influence), distributed between two hands, and at lightning speed. Ex. 3b demonstrates how Chick often thinks of each finger percussively, like a drummer.

Notice how distributing these patterns between the right and left hands lets you execute them fluidly.

Ex. 3c again shows how Chick divides melodic and rhythmic statements between both hands. Weaving lines throughout both the black and white keys makes them sound more chromatic and less tied to specific chord changes. Check out Chick’s Akoustic Band and Elektric Band albums for more riveting right-hand lines. 4. The Maj7#5 Chord

Chick was one of the first musicians to use the six-note augmented scale, as well as one of the first to play the major seventh chord with a sharp fifth. Demonstrated in Ex. 4, this dissonant sonority can be heard on recordings from his avant-garde period, such as those with the band Circle. 5. Slash Chords

Another signature Corea sound is his extensive use of “slash” (or compound) chords, shown here in Ex. 5. F/F# is a diminished sound, E/Eb is a Spanishtinged. Gb/C is half- diminished. Db/A is, once again, a maj7#5 chord, and Gb/Ab is a dominant seventh with a suspended fourth. Corea often played such slash chords with his group Return To Forever.

07-2011 5 Ways to Play Like Chick Corea by KeyboardMag

Jazz pianist, composer, and longtime Keyboard contributor Andy LaVerne has played with Chick Corea, as well as Frank Sinatra and Stan Getz. He’s Professor of Jazz Piano at The Hartt School of Music at the University of Hartford, and his latest CD is Live From NY! Visit him at andylaverne.com. Jon Regen *Chick Corea play-along book/CD featuring the author on piano.

Link: http://www.keyboardmag.com/fusion/1301/5-ways-to-play-like-chickcorea/28333 [NB: audio file on url]

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