Comping the Billy way

Here’s a fresh lesson on simplicity in comping in jazz— file this along with the post about the “Kenny” note from a few years ago. I’ve transcribed some ideas from Billy Higgins’s playing on  Things Ain’t What They Used To Be with Hank Jones and Ray Drummond, from their trio album The Essence. They form an easy progression, and it’s almost the order in which Billy played them on the recording.

You’ll note that like Kenny Clarke in the earlier post, Higgins plays a lot of & of 1/& of 3 on the snare drum. He especially seems to be centered around the 1, and his ideas are very contained within each measure of 4— that’s my feeling upon listening and not really analyzing, anyhow.

Swing the 8th notes. If you listen to the record, Higgins’s phrasing is very legato, and timingwise he’s playing behind the beat. People claim to love Billy’s playing, but it would be a real challenge for most of them to play, sound, and be as alertly relaxed as he is here.

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