Hey Jazz Guy,
I love the sound of solo jazz guitar, but playing it is totally foreign to me. How do I play
a walking bass and chords together? –Crawl-
ing in Cleveland
Dear Crawling,
Ah, the walking bass! This is a wonderful sound that works really great in solo,
duet, or small group settings. Mastering this
technique will give you an excellent foundation on which to build your solo playing,
as well as enhance your “situational awareness” in all musical settings. The key to playing great walking bass and chords together
is to start with a solid bass line. Studying
the bass and becoming a great bass player
takes years, perhaps decades of practice,
but there are a few guidelines that you can
follow to get started. First we place the root
note of each chord on the downbeats in Ex.
1. Next, in Ex. 2, we use chord tones to fill in
the empty beats. A IIm-V is a good sequence
to develop this idea on because it is easy to
hear the harmony. A two-bar sequence like
Ex. 2 does not leave much room for passing tones. However, lengthening the chord
duration in Ex. 3 allows you to be more creative. Notice two things about this exam-
ple: First, we’re still placing chord tones on
the strong beats of the bar, and second, we’re
using a chromatic passing tone on beat four
to get the next root note. Rules are meant
to be broken, and plenty of great bass lines
certainly did not place the chord tones on
the strong beats. This is just a guide to get
your ear moving in the right direction. Even-
tually, you will hear more possibilities and
leave these guidelines in the dust!
Next, we choose chords to go with our
bass notes. The ideal chord here is a two-
or three-note voicing that includes the
guide tones. Looking at a Cmaj7 in Ex. 4
we find a few good choices, placing the 3
and 7 higher or lower, and two different
inversions, with the 3 or 5 on the bottom.
The inversions are very important because
you need many ways to play the same chord with different bass notes. If we “walk” a
Cmaj7 up the C major scale [Ex. 5], we get a
sequence of chord, bass note, chord. Bring-
ing these ideas together in a IIm-V exam-
ple in Ex. 6 gives us a harmonically correct
sequence with a strong bass line. The last
step is to vary the rhythm between the
bass notes and the chords, which we do in
Ex. 7. Chords can be held over bass notes,
or attacked while the bass note is hold-
ing over. The trick is to practice enough
rhythmic variation that your sequence does
not sound repetitive. Once you’ve got the
IIm-Vs happening, it’s time to move on
to applying these concepts over the blues,
rhythm changes, and your favorite tunes.
Our final example [ Ex. 8] shows the first
half of a C blues, utilizing different com-
binations of lines, voicings, and rhythms.
In the first two bars we let the chords ring
out over the walking line. The turnaround
in bar 4 breaks the pattern and the bass
goes without a chord for two beats before
bringing a strong voicing back on the F7.
In the final two bars we slide right up and
down the scale, bringing in the diminished
chord. C7/G would be the first chord in
bar 7, hence the Ab passing tone. Keep in
mind, this is only the beginning, so study
different bass lines and focus on voice lead-
ing. Remember, the more rhythms you can
play, the better it will sound. It takes time
to develop this, but it is time well spent,
so walk on and jazz hard!
Jake Hertzog is the jazz ambassador to the
non-jazz world. Send your questions to guit-
plyr@musicplayer.com. Jake’s latest release is
Evolution [Buckyball].