World's Largest Sheet Music Selection

20150434
How To Comp
20150434
20150434

How To Comp A Study In Jazz Accompaniment by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music

By Hal Crook
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 1
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 2
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 3
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 4
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 5
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 6
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 7
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 8
How To Comp Piano scores gallery preview page 9
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 2
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 3
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 4
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 5
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 6
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 7
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 8
How To Comp by Hal Crook Piano - Sheet Music page 9
Melody Instruments (Piano/Keyboard/Guitar/Vibraphone)

SKU: AP.1-ADV9030

A Study In Jazz Accompaniment. Composed by Hal Crook. All Instruments Method or Collection; Improvisation; Method/Instruction. Advance Music. Jazz. Book and Digital Download. Advance Music #01-ADV9030. Published by Advance Music (AP.1-ADV9030).

ISBN 9783892212447. UPC: 805095090307. English.

This book/audio set presents a clear, comprehensive, one-step-at-a-time method for learning how to accompany an improvised jazz solo. As a sequel to Hal Crook's text How to Improvise, How to Comp offers precise explanations, practical exercises, recorded musical examples, four play-along tracks, and daily practice routines. How to Comp organizes a vast amount of information that helped to make the author's previous work a major contribution to jazz pedagogy. How to Comp is primarily for intermediate through advanced level players of harmonic instruments, e.g. piano (keyboard), guitar and vibraphone. However, drummers, bassists and horn players can also benefit from its study.
Subject covered include: Voicing construction, preferred stock voicings, voiceleading, constant structure, non-harmonic voicings, single-note lines, rhythmic vocabulary, altering the harmonic rhythm, motive development, dividing and shifting attention, supportive and interactive comping styles, the soloist's viewpoint, pacing, strolling, and much more. In How to Comp, the author, an accomplished jazz trombonist, pianist, composer, arranger and educator, looks deeply into the nature and challenge of artistic jazz accompaniment and puts into focus a direct, sure path toward mastery.

Close X

By signing up you consent with the terms in our Privacy Policy

I am a music teacher.