Guitar World

The Gristle Report

Emulating organ-type chord melodies

- by Greg Koch

AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT in my guitar education was the study of the way jazz and blues organ players comp, or lay down a chord progressio­n while accompanyi­ng a soloist, be it themself or someone else. A great example of this stylistic approach is heard on the tune, “2.65,” from my 1994 album Strat’s Got Your Tongue. “2.65” is one of my earliest compositio­ns, and my goal with it was to affect a block-chording/Hammond B3 organ-type sound with a shuffle (eighth-note triplet-based) groove. The song is constructe­d from shifting triads played over various open-string pedal tones, and this approach is one that I think can be adopted in a broader way, outside of the scope of the tune itself.

There are two sections of the tune, and FIGURE 1 represents the main melody, or “A” section. In bars 1-8, I’m harmonizin­g

C#, F#, the A Mixolydian mode (A, B, D, E, G) with a series of triads played on the D, G and B strings while “pumping” an open A-string pedal tone in a manner similar to what you hear B3 organ players do all of the time. Keyboard players would play a part like this by sounding the descending chord voicings with the right hand while adding the syncopated bass-note accents with the left hand. Guitar players can approximat­e this sound by fingerpick­ing, using the index, middle and ring finger to sound the chords while using the thumb to add the syncopated pedal-tone bass notes. Another option is to hybrid pick the figure, using a flatpick to strike the bass notes and the bare fingers to pluck the chords.

The highest note in each of the moving chord voicings, which are the notes on the B string , can be thought of as the melody, and the lower chord tones on the G and D strings serve to harmonize it below. The first bar of FIGURE 2 depicts the A Mixolydian mode played in descending fashion on the B string, and then the next two bars detail each of the three-note triads played

F# in the descending sequence G/A - m/A - Em/A - D/A - A7 - Bm/A - A.

Bars 1-3 of FIGURE 1 illustrate how I used this approach to kick off the “A” section of “2.65.” Notice that I’m repeatedly striking the open A-string pedal tone with my thumbed downstroke­s in a syncopated rhythm against the moving triads. I like to add some distinct articulati­on to each voicing by either sliding up to it from below, adding some vibrato by shaking the strings, or briefly sliding one fret higher and back — the chromatic half-step shift — akin to momentaril­y bending the pitches of the triad slightly higher.

After stating the melody the first time, I add one of my favorite turnaround­s, found in bar 4 of FIGURE 1 and also depicted more simply in FIGURE 3. While the A note at the 2nd fret on the G string remains constant among the voicings, the notes on the A, D and B strings move down chromatica­lly

C# to sound the progressio­n A7/ - Cdim7 - Bm7b5

- A.

After the initial melody is repeated, the progressio­n then modulates down a whole step to G, and similar voicings are played (see FIGURE 1, bars 9-12), which are based on the G Mixolydian mode (G, A, B, C, D, E, F).

Next month, we’ll tackle the tune’s “B” section, which modulates up to C.

Greg Koch is a large human who coaxes guitars into submission in a way that has left an indelible print on the psyches of many Earth dwellers. Visit GregKoch.com to check out his recordings, instructio­nal materials, signature musical devices and colorful hats.

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