Mindfulness Masterclass

Time, Tone and Technique

Paul Bollenback·
3.0 (1 review)
·BEGINNER·1 lesson·1h 31m of video
Time, Tone and Technique

About this masterclass

Guitarist Paul Bollenback teaches a class on developing your time, groove, and projection — and how technique affects all three. Drawing on his experience performing with drummers like Jeff "Tain" Watts and Billy Hart, Paul digs into the difference between merely playing in time and actually grooving.

What's covered

  • Why groove is the most important thing to work on, wherever you are in your development
  • Play-along practice with records: Art Blakey, the Grant Green/Sonny Clark Complete Quartets, plus deep-pocket choices like James Brown, Jimmy Smith, and Big John Patton
  • Locking into specific rhythm-section elements — ride cymbal swing, hi-hat patterns, and snare accents
  • Billy Hart's idea of flexible time — knowing when to push and when to lay back
  • Metronome practice that goes beyond stiff quarter-note clicking to exercises that actually swing
  • Phrasing techniques, including ending phrases on upbeats and syncopations for forward motion
  • How clean technique directly supports your rhythmic authority, in both soloing and comping

Recorded as a live class with student questions along the way, this lesson suits players who feel their time is competent but stiff, and want their playing to breathe and swing.

Lessons in this masterclass

Lessons

  • 1Time, Tone and Technique1h 31m

Reviews & Ratings

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Jeff Troxel
1/22/2011

Great playing and some excellent information, but having Paul break away in the middle of a concept to answer an online question was distracting.

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About the instructor

Paul Bollenback
Paul Bollenback is not only a masterful performer, but a down-to-earth instructor. His approach to jazz is both inspiring yet attainable. Guitar master George Benson, a long-time supporter, has described Bollenback’s work as ". . .bona-fide playing, unambiguous, up-front and powerful," calling him “a versatile dynamo on guitar. His approach to jazz and blues has a uniqueness unto itself . . ..”. That comment has special resonance in that Bollenback counts Benson high among his wide range of influences; these also include Carlos Santana, Wes Montgomery, Kenny Burrell, John McLaughlin, Johnny Winter, and Jimi Hendrix (among guitarists), as well as such giants of improvisation and composition as pianists Herbie Hancock and Bill Evans, and saxophonists Wayne Shorter and John Coltrane.