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Early Jazz vs Modern Jazz Piano

Early Jazz Piano

In the early years of Jazz (from around the 1900’s), until the the Swing Era (about 1945), the piano was still firmly rooted in the rhythm section of the band. This meant it had two primary roles:

So generally, the pianist played very rhythmically and simply helped keep the beat.

Some techniques are listed in the table below.

Modern Jazz Piano

During the Swing Era, Jazz was generally played by Big Bands which had a full rhythm section consisting of drums, bass, guitar and piano. So eventually, pianists realised that if the drummer is keeping the beat, and the bass is playing a walking bass-line (thus covering the bottom part of the register and also playing on the beat), then there’s no need for the piano to duplicate the effort.

So around the 1940’s, pianists developed the technique of ‘comping. This technique moved away from playing four-to-the-bar rhythmic patterns (as found in Early Jazz) and instead required to pianist to vary his rhythm and occasionally punctuate or stab each chord, often in between the phrases in his right hand. This technique was pioneered by the pianist Earl Hines, who is considered the Father of Modern Jazz Piano, but it was also used by Big Band leaders like Count Basie.

Early Jazz vs Modern Jazz Piano Techniques

Early Jazz PianoModern Jazz Piano
Left Hand = steady on-the-beat rhythm (Pumping)
- Stride
- Tenths & Tenth
- Walking basslines
- Walking 10ths
- Three handed effect
- Strumming
- Rolling Bass
- Broken Tenths
- Ostinato (Boogie-woogie)
Left Hand = punctuates chords (‘Comping)
Right Hand = Chordal (Chords, Arpeggio)
- Rhythmic chord based patterns
- Embellished arpeggios
- Embellished melody
- Simple riffs
- Outlining chord progression
Right Hand = individual linear lines (Horn-like)
- Single melody lines
Voicings = ‘standard’ chords
- Triads
- 7th chords (often preferring Maj6 to Maj7)
- Some extensions
- Shell chords
Voicings = 'modern' voicings
- Rootless chord voicings
- Quartal chord voicings
- Upper Structures
- More dissonant chord voicings

And that is a very short and binary history of Jazz Piano.

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