Open Voicings and Offset Rhythms in Piano Comps
This tutorial explains some useful bass/rhythm patterns when improvising a pop piano comp from the chord progression of a song. If you're working on your piano skills, and especially if you're interested in improvisation, songwriting or keyboard-based music production, you're going to find this useful!
Remember to check out my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/billhilton
And my book on this style, Seven Studies in Pop Piano: https://www.billspianopages.com/seven-studies - also available as part of my classic bundle deal at https://www.billspianopages.com/bundle
Other useful tutorials:
The 1564 chord progression toolkit: https://youtu.be/pBaaNCCfvrU
A rhythm exercise for pop piano comps: https://youtu.be/z1Zp-ZctAA4
Pop Piano Improvisation Walkthrough in F Major: https://youtu.be/xAKeaac-qVc
00:00 Overview of comping
00:58 Q1: What's with the open/split voicings?
03:09 The point of splitting the bass
04:25 The reason for the shell chords
06:48 Q2: What's with the offset rhythm?
10:47 Practising this stuff if you're new
11:57 Video stylings: slick vs AI vs Bill blethering
#pianotutorial #piano
Bill Hilton
Welcome to my piano channel! Most of my videos are piano tutorials. Hopefully you'll find them useful if you want to improve your piano playing and learn improvisation skills for jazz, blues and ballad styles. I'm not aiming at complete piano beginners,...