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5 Ways To Play Like Horace Silver

BY GEORGE COLLIGAN
June 1, 2011

The great jazz pianist Horace Silver was in many ways, one of the most un-pianistic players
ever to have touched the keys. However, he might also be the pianist who most encapsulates the
spirit of jazz. When Silver plays, he pounds the pianos low end like its a bass drum. His right hand makes
the piano scream like its a blues singer. He plays chords behind a soloist as if joining a big band shout
chorus, and he plays bebop lines like a trumpet player.

Together with the seminal drummer Art Blakey, Silver created the famed group the Jazz Messengers,
ushering in the energetic hard bop sound. Silvers piano style is a great place for budding jazz pianists to
begin their studies, because many of the salient characteristics of his playing are simple, yet effective. If you
want to get to the heart of jazz, check out Horace Silver. Here are five ways to become immersed in his style.
Editor's note: On June 18, 2014, we were saddened to learn that Horace Silver passed away. We've
reposted this lesson in his honor and memory, and you can read our collection of remembrances by the jazz
scene's best and brightest musicians here.

1. Left Hand Voicings


Silver often does something I call dropping bombs, where he plays the root in octaves in the left hand as
in Ex. 1a, or the fifth in octaves with the root in the middle,

like in Ex. 1b. Often times, he combines his dropping bombs with more Bud Powell-type bebop shell
voicings,

constructed using roots and fifths in the left hand, as in Ex. 1c.

2. Hand-to-Hand Conversation
When Silver plays solos, he creates a raucous dialogue between his left and right hands.

Ex. 2 demonstrates this conversational call and response style, which can be traced all the way back to
early blues music. Unlike other esteemed jazz pianists such as Wynton Kelly, who at times soften their left
hand to let the right hand ring out, Silver gives both hands an equal voice.
3. Right Hand Ideas
Bebop piano giant Bud Powell was one of Silvers many influences. Silver often employed bebop ideas in his
right hand lines, as in Ex. 3a,

but he also injected intervallic concepts like the use of Eastern-tinged fourths (see Ex. 3b) into his playing
for added effect.

4. Blues, Repetition, and Development


Much of Silvers soloing falls into the riff category. Note how in Ex. 4a

and Ex. 4b

he uses the language of the blues, along with repetition and motivic development to imbue his music with a
sense of structure and momentum.

5. Comping Concepts
Many of the great pianists in jazzincluding Bill Evans and Herbie Hancockare revered for their subtle use
of space in their accompaniment work. Silver often sits on the other end of the sonic spectrum as an
accompanist, comping in a full, insistent way, pushing and prodding soloists while keeping the ensemble
energy high. Ex. 5 demonstrates this conversational approach to comping.

Pianist and composer George Colligan has worked with Cassandra


Wilson, Buster Williams, Don Byron, Ravi Coltrane, and many other
acclaimed artists. Most recently, he joined drummer Jack DeJohnettes new
quintet, and released Pride and Joy on the Piloo label. Colligan is Assistant
Professor of Jazz Piano at the University of Manitoba. Find out more
at georgecolligan.com. -- Jon Regen

Link: http://www.keyboardmag.com/jazz/1303/5-ways-to-play-like-horacesilver/28192
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