POPULAR MUSIC AND THE
ACCORDIONIST
by Gary Dahl
Today's popular music is a group of various styles
- jazz, swing, country, blues, bluegrass, rock, cajun, zydeco, and others.
The accordionist of today must gather together the knowledge of the melodic
and harmonic flow of music to play in various popular styles and improvise/arrange
skillfully. One cannot simply sit down to improvise successfully
over a twelve-bar blues without having first studied how; similarly one
cannot simply play a Beethoven sonata without first having studied how
to play Beethoven. What is needed then, to accomplish professional-level
playing in various popular styles? The answer is thorough knowledge
of harmony, chord structure, rhythm, and melody (including melodic improvisation).
Don't be scared by that statement; qualified instruction can provide useful
tools toward this end in six to twelve months. Along with this, every
accordionist needs to remember the basic rule of switch selection: use
good taste appropriate to the style in which you are playing. Play
polkas in master, play jazz on the bassoon reeds alone, use violin for
French Musette, etc..
To play popular music skillfully one needs to use all
the aforementioned skills together to develop a good playing technique.
Once that has been accomplished, tricky passages will be easier and open
chords can be smoothly executed even in awkward positions. A popular
accordionist can certainly play Dizzy Fingers and the Poet
and Peasant Overture; this develops good technical skills from a classical
standpoint which are applicable to any style. I know of several accordion
soloists who perform primarily from music arranged by others. These
same soloists would dearly love to be able to read lead sheets and improvise
appropriately. (Lead sheets are melodies written on a single staff line
with chords written above the staff.) A fully accomplished accordionist,
possessing all the previously mentioned skills, can take a seemingly simple
tune like Alley Cat and play it with symphonic sophistication.
Having this ability is like the difference between an elementary school
education and a college education. It raises the accordionist to
an entirely new level. Why did Mozart, who could compose new melodies
at will, write several variations on his older melodies? Why does
a competent accordionist write, arrange, and improvise? A drawing
from a five year old child, while possessing artistic qualities, lacks
the development and refinement of a trained visual artist.
The first place to begin is listening: all of the great
musicians of the world listened to music with an attentive ear. Listen
closely for the movement of harmony and the way instruments are used in
an arrangement. Listen also to the variety of tempos and rhythms,
keeping in mind that tempo refers only to speed, and rhythm refers to the
organization of the notes. The accordion is a very sophisticated
instrument, encompassing the equivalent of a melodic instrument (right-hand
keyboard) with its own backup combo (left-hand keyboard). A good
popular musician is like a chef who knows hundreds of recipes. He
knows how to mix ingredients, when to boil, when to fry, and when to broil.
The complete musician will use all the ingredients properly and will not
add too much salt to the mixture.
Everything present in music today has evolved from something
previous - new styles arise from old styles. Though the various styles
have their own idiosyncrasies which must be learned individually (jazz,
rock, cajun, polka), they all depend on the same core elements - functional
harmony, rhythm, and melody. Every style is accessible if one only
has a grasp of those central elements. Remember: merely buying paints
and brushes doesn't make one the next Rembrandt; similarly, merely buying
an accordion doesn't make one the next Charles Magnante, Peter Soave, or
Art Van Damme.
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