This.Groove is feel, pocket is tightness with the other players.
Nice to have both, but music can work well with just one. If the music moves you, then it's done right.
I think the groove is the basic pattern - shuffles, swings, rock 8's, NOLA second line (clave/ Bo Diddley), or various Latin grooves.
The pocket is how well you lay down the groove and stay locked in with other players, especially the bass.
Thank you, Bermuda!Groove is feel, pocket is tightness with the other players.
Nice to have both, but music can work well with just one. If the music moves you, then it's done right.
What he said!Groove is feel, pocket is tightness with the other players.
Nice to have both, but music can work well with just one. If the music moves you, then it's done right.
I agree with this. And like you, I’ve been playing at a couple open blues jams and I was also complemented on my locking in the pocket.I think the groove is the basic pattern - shuffles, swings, rock 8's, NOLA second line (clave/ Bo Diddley), or various Latin grooves.
The pocket is how well you lay down the groove and stay locked in with other players, especially the bass. I think "pocket" is most applicable to shuffles, swings, and NOLA. I got a compliment a few weeks ago at an open jam about how well I played in "the pocket."
ThisGroove is feel, pocket is tightness with the other players
Not really. I can distinctly define groove. When someone asks me what groove are we playing, I can say it's a swing or shuffle or rock 8's ar a little NOLA feel or a funk or whatever. It's what would be on a piece of sheet music.IMO slang terms used pretty much synonymously.
Thanks RB. So would you say a groove is a beat? Like would a shuffle groove be the same as a shuffle beat? Or could groove have slightly different meanings?Not really. I can distinctly define groove. When someone asks me what groove are we playing, I can say it's a swing or shuffle or rock 8's ar a little NOLA feel or a funk or whatever. It's what would be on a piece of sheet music.
Pocket is more qualitative. Playing in pocket is tightness with the other players. If drummer is playing a swing groove but is just totally playing by themselves not paying any attention to accents the bass or keys are playing, then they are playing the groove but they're not playing in the pocket.
Thanks RB. So would you say a groove is a beat? Like would a shuffle groove be the same as a shuffle beat? Or could groove have slightly different meanings?