Bill Frisell may be the biggest gearhead in jazz. He is a jazz guitar maestro known for experimenting with effects and incorporating many different genres with jazz. With the amount of gear he's used I could only expect Kurt Rosenwinkel to match him in terms of gear. Bill has gone without effects on just as many sessions as he does without. Frisell is a guitarist and I expected this to be in 'classical guitar' notation where the stems indicate thumb and the rest fingers or something like that since it says PVG and not tab. But instead the music lines are broken across the treble and bass staves.
more.. Lessons • Digging Deeper • Jazz • Tab • Sound Samples • May 2016 • Bill FrisellBill Frisell Wiki
- Aug 13, 2020 The soft-spoken delivery offers a unique perspective on what the song represents. Even without the words, Frisell, Morgan and Royston land Valentine in humble strength and unity. With a good balance of accessible refrains and challenging improvisation, it's hard to deny the enduring quality of Bill Frisell.
- Bill Frisell is one of those stand out guitar players that perhaps suffers from not getting the profile he deserves for his long standing work in the field of guitar. This is a review of a new set of transcriptions by guitarist Jan Jakut. These transcriptions have been taken directly from performance work Bill.
- D G F#m B Em A Bm E F# Chords for Bill Frisell - 'Shenandoah' (solo) with capo transposer, play along with guitar, piano, ukulele & mandolin.
Chops: Intermediate
Theory: Intermediate
Lesson Overview:
• Spice up your solos with dissonant intervals.
• Create rhythmically compelling lines at blazing tempos.
• Learn how to imply altered sounds with chord clusters.
Click here to download a printable PDF of this lesson's notation.
Bill Frisell is a masterful guitarist because, as he says, 'I just try to get as deep into the music as I can.' It's this outlook that best explains his superb musicality. Whether he's playing free jazz, Americana, standards, or country, or doing soundtrack work, Frisell has an approach that is at once vulnerable and strong. In this lesson, we'll look at how Frisell might play in a variety of settings and unlock some of his secrets.
Ex. 1 is reminiscent of his early work as a leader, and this example shows how Frisell might employ single-string playing and harmonics. While mostly in the key of D major (D–E–F#–G–A–B–C#), the melodic work focuses on chord tones with a little spice from chromatic approach tones (in the first measure) and chromatic lower neighbors (in measure 3).
Click here for Ex. 1
You can't conjure up a Frisell vibe without being fluent with double-stops. A IIm–V–I progression in C, Wintoflash v.1.10. Ex. 2 highlights sixths, which Frisell would likely play with hybrid picking. This example proves that approaching a jazz progression doesn't necessarily require a bebop vocabulary. Take the time to analyze which dyads get used over each chord: There's a melodic and harmonic reason behind each move.
Click here for Ex. 2
Bill Frisell Guitar Tab
The chords in Ex. 3 float from place to place without any sense of tonal center. Frisell has mastered ways of effortlessly weaving from one chord to another. He often ups the ante by using double-stops—that doesn't make this weaving approach any easier. Here, thirds rule the day and the example illustrates how to take a motivic approach through the progression.
Click here for Ex. 3
We've covered sixths and thirds, but now we're getting into even smaller intervals—seconds. It doesn't take too many listens to Frisell's music to notice his fondness for these tight intervals and the dissonance they produce. Lucha libre aaa heroes del ring psp iso. So, how to decide which seconds work? Chord tones always figure in, usually as the upper note, so pick one and match it with a note a half- or whole-step below it.
In Ex. 4, in the first measure there's a high root note paired with the 7 of the chord right below it (a major second). In measure 2, a b9 and root are paired up (a minor second). The angular nature of this approach is a major part of Frisell's style. It's also clearly reminiscent of the quirky bebop-era pianist, Thelonious Monk.
Click here for Ex. 4
Frisell's approach often shifts on a dime, so we'll hear a mix of single-note lines, dyads, chords—anything goes! The progression in Ex. 5 is borrowed from a classic jazz standard and highlights Frisell's trademark G7#9 voicing. You'll want to be familiar with this shape and make it moveable, because Frisell will often use it in a variety of ways. Like a diminished chord, it can be shifted in three-fret increments for related, yet unique harmonic effects that yield a different set of altered notes over the dominant harmony. If you shift up the neck and play it in 3rd position, you'll have an implied G7#9#11, up another three frets, G13#5, and finally at the 9th fret, a G13b9.
Click here for Ex. 5
Frisell is no stranger to bebop, so we'll often find the same type of content we'd find in any jazz musician's playing. Ex. 6 begins with note choices that are quite chromatic, but focus on chord tones on strong beats, such as the F# on the downbeat of the second measure, which is the 3 of the D7 chord. To look at it, the opening phrase could just as easily be Joe Pass or Wes Montgomery. While it's a bit fast, try playing with all downstrokes. Frisell uses upstrokes, but the bulk of the time you'll find him playing even fairly quick lines with consecutive downstrokes. We've seen quarter-note triplet rhythms a few times already, and they're back again here. Not since pianist Bill Evans has a jazz player based so much of his work on these rhythms. The second half of the example shows more clever ideas working double-stops and broken chord stabs.
Click here for Ex. 6
Frisell isn't going to get confused with George Benson in this lifetime, but that doesn't mean he'll shy away from fast tempos. He just has his own way of dealing with the challenges. In Ex. 7, we have a two-part counterpoint that loosely implies the basic harmony, then evolves into a brief chord-tone line, and finally into some almost comping-like playing of three-note chords.
Click here for Ex. 7
Ex. 8 is reminiscent of the outside playing you might have heard Frisell explore in Naked City or with Marc Johnson's Bass Desires. The distortion pedal is on! If you've got a compressor and volume pedal, even better—those were an important part of his late '80s and early '90s sound. The bass is walking free, while the lead has the obligatory seconds sliding in parallel motion. Even though there's no harmonic function to the bass line, there's hints of tonal thinking in the guitar part that leads us to the key of F, but it's nothing more than a way of limiting an otherwise boundless palate. Of course, in the final measures it's all tossed away with the wacked-out harmonics.
Click here for Ex. 8
Every so often, we hear some of Frisell's early rock influences. Ex. 9 isn't too far from something we'd hear Clapton play in Cream. Just some sweet bluesy riffing in 12th position, key of E. Home sweet home.
Click here for Ex. 9
Frisell can present beautiful solo renditions of standards and pop tunes. In many ways, he approaches unaccompanied playing in the same way he does everything else, so expect to hear similar devices. The notable addition is more low register work and slightly fuller chords, but it's never overdone. Less is more, as evidenced by this bluesy intro (Ex. 10), which artfully combines harmonics, dyads, small melodic flourishes, and carefully placed bass notes. What more could you want?
Click here for Ex. 10
Have a Little Faith | |||
---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | |||
Released | 1992 | ||
Recorded | March, 1992 | ||
Studio | RPM Studios NYC | ||
Genre | Downtown music, Americana | ||
Length | 60:46 | ||
Label | Elektra Nonesuch | ||
Producer | Wayne Horvitz | ||
Bill Frisell chronology | |||
|
Have a Little Faith is the fourth album by Bill Frisell to be released on the Elektra Nonesuch label. It was released in 1992 and features performances by Frisell, Don Byron, Kermit Driscoll, Guy Klucevsek and Joey Baron covering a range of American classical and popular music.[1]
Reception[edit]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz selected this album as part of its suggested 'Core Collection' calling it a 'marvellous examination of Americana'.[2]
The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow awarded the album 5 stars out of 5, stating, 'This is one of the most inventive recordings of the 1990s and should delight most listeners from any genre'.[3]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Penguin Guide to Jazz | [2] |
Allmusic | [3] |
Track listing[edit]
- 'The Open Prairie': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 3:11
- 'Street Scene in a Frontier Town': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 1:45
- 'Mexican Dance and Finale': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 3:44
- 'Prairie Night (Card Game at Night)/Gun Battle': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 5:02
- 'Celebration After Billy's Capture': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 2:17
- 'Billy in Prison': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 1:33
- 'The Open Prairie Again': from Billy the Kid (Copland) – 2:34
- 'The Saint-Gaudens in Boston Common': Excerpt 1 (Ives) – 0:41
- 'Just Like a Woman' (Dylan) – 4:49
- 'I Can't Be Satisfied' (Morganfield) (3:00)
- 'Live to Tell' (Leonard, Madonna) – 10:10
- 'The Saint-Gaudens in Boston Common': Excerpt 2 (Ives) – 3:05
- 'No Moe' (Rollins) – 2:37
- 'Washington Post March' (Sousa) – 2:05
- 'When I Fall in Love' (Heyman, Young) – 3:26
- 'Little Jenny Dow' (Foster) – 3:30
- 'Have a Little Faith in Me' (Hiatt) – 5:39
- 'Billy Boy' (Traditional) – 1:38
Personnel[edit]
- Bill Frisell – guitar
- Don Byron – clarinet, bass clarinet
- Guy Klucevsek – accordion
- Kermit Driscoll – bass
- Joey Baron – drums
References[edit]
- ^Nonesuch Records album info accessed 12 September 2008.
- ^ abCook, Richard; Brian Morton (2006) [1992]. 'Bill Frisell'. The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings. The Penguin Guide to Jazz (8th. ed.). New York: Penguin. pp. 464. ISBN0-14-102327-9.
- ^ abYanow, S. Allmusic Review accessed June 15, 2011