• Latest
  • Trending
Manhasset Specialty Company

Not Just Playing Along – Tools for the Accompanist

September 19, 2022

Crafting a Creative Mindset for Band – Part 2

December 14, 2025

Headlines December 2025

December 10, 2025

Turn Rejection Into Success

December 10, 2025

Full Plate? Slow Down to Show Up

December 10, 2025

Tuning Ritual for Jazz Band

December 8, 2025

Why You Matter

December 8, 2025
2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

December 1, 2025
Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

Using Repair Initiatives as a Strategy for Increasing Community Engagement

November 29, 2025
Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

Benefits of Tri-M: Why and How to Start a Chapter at Your School

November 28, 2025
New Products November 2025

New Products November 2025

November 26, 2025
Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

Dip Your Toes In: Practical Eclectic Styles Skills for the Classical Musician

November 25, 2025
Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

Guitar Tricks for Tricky Chords

November 25, 2025
Sunday, December 14, 2025
  • Contact
SBO+
  • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
  • String Section
  • Mariachi
  • Woodwinds
  • Percussion
  • Repertoire
  • Playing Tips
  • Wind Talkers
  • GoodVibes
  • Fundraising
No Result
View All Result
  • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
  • String Section
  • Mariachi
  • Woodwinds
  • Percussion
  • Repertoire
  • Playing Tips
  • Wind Talkers
  • GoodVibes
  • Fundraising
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

Not Just Playing Along – Tools for the Accompanist

bySBO Staff
September 19, 2022
in Archives, By Arrangement, Choral
0
Manhasset Specialty Company
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT
TI:ME and Midwest Clinic

By Fred Bogert

I’ve spent a lifetime accompanying singers. Mostly on piano, sometimes on guitar. I’ve provided accompaniment for soloists, ensembles, choirs, some with other instruments, bands, even orchestras, and lots of times just me. No matter what kind of style the music explores, I never tire of the adventure found in supporting and interacting with vocalists.

If the challenges and joys of accompanying were to be distilled into a single word, to me that word would be: dynamics. Voices expressing music are nothing if they are not dynamic, full of rises and falls, changes in time and timbre, telling musical stories with passion. To enhance that range of emotive expression the accompanist needs to truly be the wind beneath the wings of the vocals. When this happens, the whole performance is lifted. Even a full choir sings with more confidence and focus when the accompanist aids the conductor’s directing.

ADVERTISEMENT

To be responsible to the singers, I feel the accompanist must be more deeply immersed in all aspects of the music than anyone else except the director. A strong working knowledge of theory, counterpoint and harmony combine with excellent keyboard skills to give the effective accompanist a Zen-like center from which they can move instantly through the infinite number of choices-of-the-moment that arise in performance. And, of course, no two performances are ever exactly alike. Challenging! Fun!

Symphony of Magic

I’ll never be a concert pianist. I say that because when I hear folks mention “keyboard skills” I know that I’ll never play the Liszt Paganini Etudes or perform the Minute Waltz in 30 seconds. What has helped me a bunch over the years is the basics – scales and arpeggios, ala Hanon, and an easy command of chord inversions – major, minor, seventh, augmented, diminished, both hands. Metronome practice at reasonable tempos. Every day, to build a solid sense of time and meter. To me that’s enough athletics for what the accompanist requires.

Beyond that is the “chess game” that is played out in musical progressions. A strong, intuitive knowledge of theory and diatonic (and even non-diatonic!) harmony is essential for constructing effective dynamics. To keep things finite, here’s my recommendations for improving your game:

ADVERTISEMENT

Play some of the Beethoven Sonatas. He is still the master of form and structure. His theme and variation ideas are amazing. Play them until you can dream them.

Play some of the Chopin preludes. His harmonies show up in Mel Torme and Miles Davis. Learn Horowitz’s rubato style of the Bmin. It’s a symphony movement in two pages. Then do the Ab.

Study Jerry Coker’s book – Improvising Jazz – you’ll never regret it. Teach it to someone.

ADVERTISEMENT

Study John Mahegan’s Improvising Jazz, Vol. 1, 4. The first book is Tonal and Rhythmic Principles. The second (#4) is Contemporary Piano Styles. I spent two years learning the concepts and voicings presented in these two volumes. I’ve built a career on them.

Now imagine Beethoven, Chopin, Coker and Mahegan all wrapped up in one canny accompanist. Go for it.

Fred Bogert has spent the last 45 years in the music business. He has produced, written for, and performed on three Grammy-nominated CDs, as well as appeared as a composer, producer and performer with a variety of artists from John McEuen and David Amram to the Austin Symphony and the Nashville Chamber Orchestra. Fred’s Nashville studios included RCA Studio B and Studio C, where he recorded over three thousand songs for a who’s who of independent artists. His website is fredbogert.com, and his choral scores are available on sheetmusicplus.com. He lives in Louisville, KY.

Midwest Clinic Technology Pre-Conference

You may also like:

Technology: Music Ed Apps 2012 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report SBO Presents the 21st Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference The 2014 Best Communities for Music Education 2013 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Practice vs. Practish

Next Post

D’Addario Accessories Premium Leather Guitar Straps

Next Post
D’Addario Accessories Premium Leather Guitar Straps

D’Addario Accessories Premium Leather Guitar Straps

Please login to join discussion
ADVERTISEMENT
  • December 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • November 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • October 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • September 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • August 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2025 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result
  • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114