Soul Jazz, although having been established and popularized in the ’60s and ’70s, lives on today in many popular artists’ styles. Then, it was players like Phil Upchurch, Pat Martino, George Benson, Kenny Burrell, and Grant Green. Today you can find soul jazz inspiration in acts like Garaj Mahal, Snarky Puppy, and Questlove. If artists like these inspire you to play, you have come to the right place!
In his course, Soul Jazz Survival Guide, Fareed Haque divulges the secrets and techniques to becoming proficient in the language of soul jazz
Here are 7 free soul jazz
Mixing Major & Minor Blues
Now this is where it starts to get fun. If the C major blues scale gives you all of the sweet notes in C major, the C minor blues scale gives you the funky sounds. So, anywhere you have C major, try adding in C minor pentatonic licks. Similarly (and this can start to get confusing, so try not to think about it, but just look at it on the
Adding the Major 9th
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The 9th on the other hand is a sweet tone. Have fun with this one and combine it with the major and minor third to create some cool phrases. Bend into and out of this one as well!
Adding Chromatics
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Starting to sound more and more like jazz, innit? Before you get too excited about the notes, keep in mind that much of what we call soul jazz is about the rhythm and phrasing, and of course swing of the lines. So, don’t just practice the notes, focus on matching the rhythmic feel of the players you love. Listen hard, is the feel ahead of the beat? Behind the beat? Swinging? If so, how much swing? It’s all about how the notes sit in relation to the rhythm section. Experiment until you start to get the feel you want.
Rhythm & Comping Approaches
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Keep in mind that rhythm
So, what is a “part”? Typically, we’re referring to a repeating figure that is rhythmic, melodic, and creates a counterpoint to the other parts. Check out James Brown to get an idea of this. The great Joe Zawinul once told me to play a
Lab Rat: Overview
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This funky little jam moves between C9 and Eb9. Check out the rhythm part carefully. There is some C9, some C7#9. Often, we’ll be using the 9th (really the same as the 2nd but an octave higher), the #9 (or #2), same as the minor third (b3) as well as the major third in our chords.
Lab Rat: Performance
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The ghosted/muted chords and notes are as important as the non-ghosted notes. Make sure that even the muted notes have a clear attack. Just to be clear, it’s almost impossible to transcribe this kind of thing using standard notation. Even though Glen Morgan has done a nice job here, it’s still not going to get you where you want to be…you’re going to have to listen, watch, and imitate from the video. Also, full disclosure, there are a ton of mistakes in this take. But it’s pretty funky, and that’s what makes it right, mistakes and all. Fixing the mistakes might make it correct, but correct isn’t funky now, is it? Don’t let that producer, or engineer, or music teacher, or your mom make you fix it ’cause it isn’t correct. But do fix it if it ain’t funky!
Lab Rat: Breakdown
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So, one of the reasons I chose this example to start out with is that it moves between two related keys. The chords are basically C7 and Eb7. Since we’re using both major and minor pentatonics, what’s the link here? Think about it…work it out. Give up? Okay:
C major pentatonic and C minor pentatonic go with C7. Eb major pentatonic and Eb minor pentatonic go with Eb7. Okay? So now, what’s the common element, the link? Take a close look at Cm pentatonic – C, Eb, F, G, Bb, and now take a look at Eb major pentatonic – Eb, F, G, Bb, C. Notice anything? Anything at all? Oh! Oh! Oooh! It’s the same notes! Dang. So, you could use Eb major pentatonic the whole way and it would work fine. Well, pretty good, except like a sandwich with salt and no peppa’, it’d be boring and bland. Your call, your choice.
Digging these free soul jazz