This was the valuable lesson I learned tonight. I called out
"Boogie On,
Reggae Woman", a funk in Ab with I-IV chords and a II-V
turnaround. I sang
the bass line for the rhythm section, and the keyboardist knew it
beforehand. I knew the lyrics fairly well and had a cheat sheet
just in
case. I had practiced the harp solo and had it down fairly well --
4th pos.
on a G harp because I don't own an Ab harp to play in 1st like
Stevie did.
(My version sounds reasonably close to the original because all
those blow
bends are still there. You just kind of move the solo down one
hole on the
harp.)
For all that preparation, there were so many things wrong with the
song that
I should have just called it off halfway through. I forgot to
write down
the chords for the chorus, so the band just played the head over
and over.
That made my harp solo sound off-key, because it's based on the
chorus, and
it probably was slightly off-key anyway because I'm a novice at 4th
position. The song has that I-IV progression twice, but I didn't
tell the
band that, so the vocals didn't match up to the music half the
time. The
drummer didn't know the song, and I didn't describe the percussion
well
enough beforehand, so there was way too much kick. I put down my
bullet mic
and played the harp solo into the vocal mic, which wasn't set up
for that,
plus I'm not used to that style, so I couldn't really hear myself
playing.
Also, we had no idea how to end the song after everyone
begrudgingly took a
solo.
So there you have it. Don't try to play Stevie unless you have a
band with
rehearsals. There are too many things that could go wrong, and in
a blues
jam setting, the non-blues chord progressions don't go over so well.
Jonathan Metts
_______________________________________________
Harp-L is sponsored by SPAH, http://www.spah.org
Harp-L@xxxxxxxxxx
http://harp-l.org/mailman/listinfo/harp-l