Robben Ford - Lesson Guitar Player Unchained Melodies.pdf

August 13, 2017 | Author: Porky Octavarium | Category: Scale (Music), Chord (Music), Harmony, Blues, Music Theory
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Robben

Ford’s

~~

Umchaimed “You’re not Blues just following your fingers.” e’s played

with

Jimmy

Wltherspoon, Miles Davis, and Joni Mitchell.

His

sassy phrasing and burly, thrusting tone can bring you to your knees. He plays from the gut, yet commands the respect of G.I.T.‘s brainiest chopsters. Like no one else, Robben Ford walks a tightrope between blues, rock, and jazz. When we thought

of investigating

the blues/

bebop axis, we knew just who to call. “I don’t want licks,”

Robben

to show anybody says emphatically.

“That’s got nothing

to do with real

music. The whole thing is to get the concept.” This means, says Ford, mastering impart

several technical

devices that

a jazz flavor to improvised

leads: “The one I use the most is the half-step/whole-step

scale.”

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There’s a story here. “I was about 18,” Robben recalls, “playing with Charlie Musselwhite. Up to then, I’d been using real standard 7th- and Sth-chord voicings and blues scales. We opened for Larry Coryell for a week at the Ash Grove in L.A. I asked him, ‘What’s all that out shit you play?’ And he said, ‘Most of it is based on the half-whole scale.’ So I started fooling around with that. I made up a couple of licks and realized here was the sound I was looking for.” Bebop bullet If there’s such a thing as a magic bebop bullet, this is it. The scale is constructed from strictly alternating half- and whole-steps. Ex. 1 shows it in the key of C. The major scale and its respective modes offer only seven notes: the half-whole (HW) scale is an eight-note deal. Used skillfully, the HW makes a terrific sub for the good ol’ pentatonic blues scale. It puts hop’s classic altered notes-i9, #9, and #lI-at your fingertips. These tones are particularly effective played over dominant-7th chords. There are dozens of HW fingerings and patterns, but no sweat, says Robben, you don’t have to memorize them all: “I don’t lock myself into any particular fingering. This approach can be limiting in terms of speed, but it frees you up melodically. You’re not just following your fingers.” Ex. 2 shows a useful two-octave fingering to get you started. Play it a few times to get the scale’s sound in your ear. Like most scales, the HW sounds pretty grim played as an ascending and descending pattern. “You need to absorb melodies that exist within the scale,” Robben advises, “so your ears start to hear music.” The secret is to judiciously select tones that rub the chord of the moment in satisfying ways. Ex. 3, a Ford-o-phrase extracted from the HW scale in C, illustrates how subtle this can be. Savor the interplay between 0s major and minor third (or #9) in beat one. This chromatic motion contrasts nicely with the two preceding interval jumps (A-Cand C-B. Interval jumps suggest melodies, but scalewise motion has its place. It can generate momentum, as in Ex. 4, a 17-IV7 change. Here, Ford chonks through a full HW scale, coloring CIwith a tangy 13, #ll, #9, and b9, before coming to rest on the third of F9. The slides accentuate the jazz vibe.

Tuning in Once you tune into the HW sound, the 4-Fh in the key of Ccan sound rather lame against the 17 chord-in this case, C7. The #4 simply has more lift. At times, however, blues harmony demands the l-l4 in an otherwise HW passage. Check out Ex. 5: When the change goes to FS-the IV7-Robben’s not afraid to hit E.Yeah, it falls outside the scale, but it makes complete harmonic sense. Furthermore, the F&F# interplay is ear-grabbing. To master the fretboard, you need to practice your favorite lines in various positions and across different string groups. The goal is to cue Ex.3 Relaxed

c7

Ex.4 F9

En 5

c7

F9

-

Ex.l

,A 11 HW

HW

HWH

W

Ex.2

60

blues swing

J=so.so

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T A

11

11

El/4 * 1.’ lltn

11 I?

off aural, rather than visual, signposts when improvising. Play Ex. 6a, a line rich with altered tones, interval jumps, and even a couple of heretic I+. This fingering incorporates cool rhythmic slides (end of bar 2 and start of bar 3) that drive the phrase forward. Now try Ex. 6b, with its alternate fingering for bar 2. This time, the line intersects F9 at the seventh position instead of the fifth. Alternate fingerings open doors to subtle melodic variations and suggest new directions for follow-up phrases. Ex. 6c parks the original lick at the tenth position. Located two frets above the standard blues box, this region provides a wealth of jazzy moves. In bar 2, fret the quick slides with your index finger (beat two). It’s fast, but with a light touch you can do it. Remember: It’s not about pressing the string into the fretboard. Apply only as much pressure as necessary to keep the string in contact with the fretwire. Stay nimble and off the wood. Diminished expect&ions The HW scale furnishes diminished

arpeggios useful for souping up

Ex. 6a c7 J=mw

,I’.

1.

Ex. 6b J=6o-QO Alternate

fingering

c7

F9

Ex. 6c J=6o-90 Alternate

fingering

c7

blues licks. In Ex. 7a, an F#dim7builds melodic tension in the subdominant realm, which is subsequently released over the tonic. The phase features a slick diagonal fretboard sweep. “See, you’re intimating chord changes,” explains Robben, while playing the turnaround in Ex. 7b. Yo-concept time: The HW scale contains a number of diminished-7th arpeggios. In the key of C, we’ve already identified one as F#dim7. Can you name the others? Use Ex. 1 as a chord-calculating abacus. (Hint: The formula for a diminished 7 is l-b3+5&7, or, more informally, l-b3-b5-6.) In a blues progression, the listener’s ear is naturally drawn to chordal transitions. You can heighten the drama by weaving HW color-tones into phrases that ramp up to or cross over these harmonic boundaries. The next three examples show Ford-approved approaches to I7-IV7, lV7-17, and 17-V7 changes. The cool interval jumps in Ex. 8 balance the five half-step moves. In just two bars, Robben skillfully nails the b9, #9, #ll, and 13--&l the bop goodies. The downbeat accents in bar 1 help drive the phrase forward, while the hammers, pulls, and slides obscure its scale origins. The IV7 in Ex. 9 gets a b9 too. Another view: You’re building a F9 quick #IVdim7 runway into CI3. Concept time again: You can approach either the 17 or V7 from a diminished-7th chord whose root is a flatted fifth, or tritone, away, In C, for instance, you can step through F#dim 7 to reach C7 (17) and Dbdimlto reach G7(V7). The HW scale contains arpeggios for these diminished-7th tritone vamps. How handy. Repeating a rhythmic motif, as in Ex. 10, is another effective way to rip across chord changes. This phrase proves that HW color can be soulful and sweet. Listening to Robben weave “out” notes into a blues lead helps you appreciate the HW scale’s musical potential. “Misdirected Blues” (from the Blue Line’s Mystic Mile) showcases Fords bluesbop cunning. The following two examples hint at the action. In Ex. 11, note the position shift going into bar 2. No problem: You’ve got an eighth rest in which to make the transition. Dig the chromatics in Ex. 12. Ford solos at a brisk clip with a fat, horn-like tone. Our final treat is one of Robben’s toothsome turnF9 around recipes. “Instead of playing a standard turnaround like this,” says Ford, picking Ex. 13a, “1 might use tritone substitutions to extend the harmony.” Flat-5 logic Let’s examine

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logic Robben uses to create Ex. 13b’s two-bar nine-chord extravaganza. First, a bit of background: A tritone is an interval of three wholesteps. This creates a diminished fifth, which divides an octave in half. Inverted, the interval remains a tritone. In a dominant-7th chord, the 3rd and b7th degrees form a trltone-E and I$. in Ci’. Invert this, and you get Bb and E (F/,)-the 3rd and b7th of Gb 7. So here’s the principle: Any two dominant-7th chords whose roots are a diminished fifth apart share the same tritone and can be substituted for one another. This is called the “flat-5 substitution.” With us so far? Okay, let’s start with a diatonic IIIm-Vim-Em-V-1 progression in C Em-Am-Dm-G-C. Make the harmony bluesier by changing the chords to non-diatonic dominant 7s, except for that last C: E7-A7-D7-G-C. Bingo-a common ragtime turnaround. Now insert the tritone twin after each dominant 7: E7-Bb7-A7-Eb7-D7&7-G7-D/,7-C. In his turnaround, Robben simply swapped a C7 for the starting E7 and finished with a C7-meaner than the C. Enhancing a standard 7th-chord progression with flat-5 dominants gives you the momentum and colorful root movement of alternating diminished and half-step intervals. Check out the common notes in each pair of tritone twins. The lesson here? “Any 7th chord can use its tritone 7th as a passing chord,” concludes Robben. Time and tips Robben has a very elastic, yet controlled, sense of time. “I’m not a slave to it-the bands keeping track for me. I’ll play freely, at slower and faster paces, but the time is there so I can come back to it. You should always have that pulse going inside.” Ford played all his examples in C to make it easier to digest the HW concept. Once you feel comfortable with the scale’s sound, be sure to work it up in diierent keys using different finger&s. Trv four notes per

string-two half-steps separated by a whole-step-but beware: This kind of symmetry, while great for speed, can encourage pattern playing. Diminished for days Here’s the answer to the question I posed 760 words ago. The C HW scale contains two diminished 7th chords-Cdim7 and Dbdim7. Counting their inversions, this makes a total of eight diminished chords. You can build a diminished-7th from every note in a HW scale! And dig this concept: The half-whole scale consists of two diminished 7th arpeggios offset by a half-step. It’s a perspective that yields many intriguing fretboard patterns. Ford on gear “I spend more time than I like to on my equipment and less than I should,” says Ford. “It’s a very critical element.” His main ax is a Fender Robben Ford Signature Series. “I’ve been using that guitar for ten years. We’re developing it more in the Custom Shop now.” On his Mystic Mile he also used an early ’60s Gibson 355 (“which I love”), a ‘62 Tele, and a ‘62 Strat. “The Dumble is definitely my amplifier of choice,” he says with a smile. “I dig ‘em. But if somebody wanted to get my sound without a Dumble? The closest you’re going to get is a Fender Twin. I’m straight with guitars and amps. Where I run into problems is with everything else. Reverb-that’s the tough one. I’m planning to go with spring reverb. I just don’t like the other shit.” In fact, Ford allows, he used an old, brown, stand-alone Fender spring reverb on Mystic Mile. “As much as I believe in just plugging straight into an amp-that’s where you’re going to get your best tone, there’s no doubt about it-you can also get good tone if you work with what you have. I hear people with a Boogle and a couple of MXR pedals getting great sound. Frankly, I

Ex. 7b

Ex. 7a

F9 IV7

Ex. 8

F#dim7 # IVdim7

Ex. 9 J =60-90

I 62

C9 17

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Cl3

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B1/4

I

think low-tech really is going to give you better sound. It’s just hard to get that sound at high volume. That’s why you wind up getting more and more expensive gear, because you’re playing so damned loud.”

just tuning in to the jazz vlbe, Robben recommends Miles’ Kind of Blue, My Funny Valentine, and ‘Four’ & More, and Coltrane’s Ballads, A Love Supreme, and Live at the Village Gate.

Ford on Ford Like most veteran players, Robben has a special affinity for certain recordings he’s made. “I’m proud of the Charles Ford Band album on Arhoolie. Also, the solo in ‘Rock Island Rocket’-off the first LA. Express album I did-has some interesting stuff. Talk to Your Daughter might still be my favorite guitar work. I like ‘Talk To Your Daughter,’ ‘Wild Without You,’ and ‘I Ain’t Got Nothing But The Blues.’ I really love the ensemble playing on ‘Revelation.“’ On Mystic Mile, Ford cites his solo on “Misdirected Blues” (“it’s a live performance”) and “My Love Will Never Die” as favorites.

The big mind “Mozart improvised within forms,” comments Ford, “just like we improvise within blues or jazz. Mozart was a heavy boozer and womanizer, but he had a big mind. That music has a bigger mind. What jazz and blues has is heart and soul. It’s a little more base, you know? Coltrane had a big mind too. Miles had a pretty big mind in another way. He could be intimidating. He came at you with his whole persona almost all the time. Miles was not a lick player. He had a few, but he was searching for notes that sounded good to his ear, even at up tempos. That’s the kind of player I strive to be. I’m a minimalist: I like simplicity, melody, fire, and swing. I want to hear the music, I don’t want to display technical facility. It’s got to mean something. I’m n looking for the good note.” ................*..a.................*................*................................................* Andy Ellis is consulting editorfor How to Play Guitar.

Mfluences “Bloomfield was the guy,” says Ford. “He’s the reason I got excited about guitar and became a player. I also dug Hendrix, Clapton, and B.B. King. To this day I listen to Cohrane and Miles Davis.” If you’re

Ex. 10 J=60-90

Ex. 11 Cl3

G9

F9

c9

J = 106-116

*

8114

Ex. 13a

Ex. 12 F9

c9

J=106-116

*

^

02

FQ

F&dim7

C7

Ex. 13b c7

Bb7

A7

67

07

AL7

G7

Db7

c7

I

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