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Rhythm and accompaniment in jazz

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Lesson details

Learning outcome

I can identify idiomatic playing styles of the rhythm section instruments and understand how they interact.

Key learning points

  1. Rhythm sections have idiomatic ways of comping (playing the accompaniment).
  2. Chordal instruments (piano, keyboard or guitar) comp using syncopated rhythms and extended chords.
  3. The typical jazz ‘swing groove’ uses swing quavers, syncopated rhythms and accents, without heavy use of kick drum.
  4. Drummers sometimes use brushes to create a softer timbre.
  5. The bass often plays walking bass lines.

Keywords

  • Comping - when the rhythm section play an accompaniment to a melody; there are many different styles of comping

  • Extended chords - chords that include more than three notes

  • Brushes - drum sticks with bristles that drummers often use to create a soft, gentle timbre in jazz

  • Accent - a note that is emphasised more than other notes

Common misconception

Rhythm section musicians follow detailed notation when playing.

Rhythm section musicians will follow simple information, usually just the names of the chords. They then 'comp', improvising their rhythms based on those chords.

Teacher tip

Pupils can extend their learning by exploring inversions of the extended chords. Encourage them to play the chord sequence while moving their hand on the keyboard as little as possible. This is more in keeping with jazz piano technique than jumping between root position chords.

Equipment

DAW, MIDI keyboards

Licence

This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2026), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0
except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions
(Collection 2).

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