I am really into studying bass and the composition of bass
lines to jazz standards.
I am using my musical notation software to write walking
bass lines to jazz standards. This is
giving me insights into jazz and chord structures.
My musical notation software allows me to write out a sheet
of music, using the notes that I choose myself.
Then it lets me play the music back on my computer, so I can hear how the composition sounds. If I don’t like the sound, I can change the
notes to make it better.
I am studying something called “voice leading,” which means
that when you play one chord (say Cm7 followed by F7), you move from the last note
in C7 to the nearest note in F7, not necessarily to the root note, but to whatever note is closest. It could be the 1st, 3rd,
5th or 7th of F7 in this example, but it can also be a
passing note, a note in the respective scale that is not a note in the chord.
You could play Cm7 followed by F7 using chord notes in order: C Eb G Bb
-- F A C Eb and it would work but
sound dorky. Using voice leading you
could smooth out the bass line by playing the chords in this order: C D Eb G, F G A C. of course, D is not a note in Cm7 and G is
not a note in F7, these are passing notes that smooth out the bass line and it
sounds good. The best use of passing
notes are on the 2nd and 4th notes in the chord.
I am writing out a bass line to Autumn Leaves in G minor (Bb
major) just to solidify my understanding.
I won’t do this for every song in my repertoire, but I will study each
song separately to get the gist.
More about this later.
good stuff Gary! Voice Leading is key to creating some great sounding bass lines! thanks for posting this
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