Re: What chords do you usually use for Comping?
i find it hard to comp when a keyboard player is present so i usually step out of the tune for a bit, any help with that?
yeh thats always difficult, and i reckon laying out is actually a good thing. Thats one of the cool things about jazz is that you dont have to play all the time, just sit back and listen to the changes. Itll make the other players happier to have more space and when you do play it will mean more.
BUt if you want to hear some great guitar and piano together, check out a record called "undercurrent" by Bill Evans and Jim Hall. Its an all time classic.
ANother more contemporary example would be the record by Russel Malone and Benny Green.
GUitars and piano are both harmonic instruments, so they often fill similar roles in a jazz combo. My advice is to keep doing what you already do and lay out, then think more like a horn player when you are blowing the changes.
Still, if you really want to add some flavour to the band when you are comping, try playing chords using only the 2,3 and 4 strings and avoid playing root notes entirely. Listen carefull to the keyboardist and try finding unusual places in the rhythm where there is some space for you to add an accent. Roll back your tone and volume knobs a bit and try to think about being part of a band texture and try to blend into the piano part.
3 and 2 note chords also work great behind a singer when you are sitting next to a bassist also - good bassists will fill the low end lines in, so playing big bar chords kinda stomps all over that.
Here is todays cliche for ya!....Less is more.
Just think of having a piano player there as an opportunity for you to relax and enjoy (kinda like what the horn players do when they finish their solos).
Hope these ideas help.