What are the important skills to develop? 🙂 3 Basic Jazz Chord Exercises You Want To Work On: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-w1rW9WuqaLY.html
I remember when I was still playing very actively (bass) and met a jazz bassist at church. He recorded every performance, mostly to judge his intonation. (He played fretless.) I learned a lot from him.
I always love professional level musicians trying to play out of time on purpose to demonstrate things. It's so funny and sounds so uncomfortable and absolutely nothing like a beginner
I remember a guitar teacher trying to teach "economy of motion". He tried to show an example of "flaring your fingers out" but he couldn't do it lol, and had to pull the pinky out using his right hand lmao 🤣😂
So I saw this video on a guy who learnt like all positions all keys, you name it right. And then he had to solo and couldn't because he didn't focus on rhythm. So been playing along with blue bossa and all of me tracks this morning and just really emphasizing rhythm and it really just works out man, the notes that don't produce or ''wrong'' notes. It just doesn't really matter at all, or you can get away with so much
Haha step 1: Subscribe to this channel. But on the real, I took this advice to heart. I can attest that just learning 30+ standards, some by ear and some reading chords (because it can be quite exhausting), watching music theory videos and taking written notes in a notebook is what has worked for me. I also just noodle around and try to make strange chord progressions, sometimes even making songs out of them. Playing just a segment of a jazz standard chord progression with a loop pedal is how I practice soloing improv. First I learn the vocal melody which is usually simple by ear
Very good, thx Jens. Maybe your next book should address patterns, very useful. As always, many thanks to you that share so much of your knowledge to us.
Comping practice works for me when comping with the great recordings. You have a full great band rather than a backing track, and you have different recordings in different keys which also pushes you to understand the form better. Leads - you can loop a section of the song that is not too densely filled out, or play over Aebersold :)
Again learn as many song as possible. Listen to Bach, Parker, Brahms, Parker, Chopin, Ellington , Ravel, Wes, Rachmaninov, Martino. Learn solo and songs from these Greats. Don’t go to RU-vid and have them show you the solos. USE YOUR EARS. The music takes care of the necessary techniques. You don’t improve your ear by buying a Rick Beato book. LISTEN. I have taught 1000’s Also Barry Harris method is much more than adding a 1/2 step between 5&6. This is what Beato teaches. Good luck Jens. I know you believe, but I don’t see enough players using their ears. We need to use our ears. Know what we are listening to. Play without you IPhones and iPads
I'm not a professional musician. I try to play the pieces of music that I listen to. So, to me, it's important to learn as if I'm studying a foreign language: adding new stuff to things I already use. During the process there are poetic and prose texts. They give me different points of view. Excellent video!
I practice technique, scales, arpeggios and reading chord charts all in one exercise. I take a song and first play through the song with scales on each chord. Then I play the arpeggios through the song. Consolidating these together saves time and I don't get bored.
Great advice throughout! One thing which helped me when i was starting, was trying to learn not only guitar parts by ear but some of the other instruments also, like the horns, or even just the vocal melody. It helped me with my phrasing, my ear, and musical ideas in general. I would take a horn phrase i really liked and try to guitar-ify it. It made me have to listen for nuances, and all this really helped me. Play music! Thank you, Jens
So Jens, just curious about your opinion: when you improvise a solo, do you "hear" the solo inside your head so that you could sing it instead of playing it on guitar (if you wanted)? Or does the solo kind of emerge... kind of like when talking to someone you don't necessarily hear what you're saying before you actually say it? (Enjoyed this video, btw!! 😁)
I don't think it is that conscious, there are times when you "hear" notes very specifically, but it is not in a way that you are thinking each note while singing it in the way you might do solfege.
@@JensLarsen this is so interesting. Maybe it could be a good idea for a video? How bach can teach you about jazz. I am definitely looking up on this topic. Thanks!
I purchased the Jazz Guitar Roadmap about a year ago. Then I got distracted and went on a journey to find other ways to delve into jazz. That search eventually led be back to the Jazz Guitar Roadmap. There are countless content creators out there promising "this-is-all-you-need" approaches to learning jazz, but few offer the focused, comprehensible, and systematic approach as Jens' "Jazz Guitar Roadmap." After a while, you realize--hey, "That's what Jens said." All roads lead to (and, eventually, "back to") the Jazz Guitar Roadmap.
Love your lessons, would love to see more on how to play real fast like those fast turnaround lines like joe pass and john coltrane do there is never anything on you tube hardly
In Jazz the lines you play fast are not really that different from the ones you play slow, similar to how the vocabulary is very similar from instrument to instrument, so all lessons on turnarounds are also about fast turnarounds 🙂
find it also interesting because I know the melody of all of me extremely well with lots of inspiration, so lots of material to draw from. And I actually never heard blue bossa's melody. You just approach it in a different way
This is 100% gold advice. One additional advice i could give you is this. Use a chord and experiment different scales with different names to develop you own style and flavour because there are no real jazz masters thay play All the time C maj scale over C maj chord ,believe me nobody does that. If you want your playing to be flat and dull play the name of the scale that fits the chord....mission accomplished So experiment different scales over one chord to understand what i wanna say..
@@JensLarsen there is a small interview and lesson with the bass player Gary Willis where he demonstrates exactly what i am talking about. For years i have been playing the corresponded scales to chords and I though there is always something missing. When i saw Gary Willis explanation something clicked immediately. Also analyzing solos for example of pat metheny never made sense (playing over some chords)but after learning this method now i know why that it. It gives them a different flavour. Example What makes Metheny sound like Metheny or Willis ,Willis? Example Al Di Meola constay uses diminished scale half step next to the maj chord. You immediately recognize that. They use scales that are completely different names over chords. Same does Scott Henderson in his lesson. I will check Gary Willis video and post his ideas here.
Ear and finger coordination is the hardest so for me I can say that nothing happened progressive in my playing until I trained my fingers to move as I wish. The secret is the finger gymnastic skills, LOL Once the fingers go where the ear wants everything starts to make sense.
#4) record your playing ….very important practice tool. Particularly important for advanced musicians to critically listen for accuracy, rhythm and phrasing.
My apologies, I only watched up to about 10 minutes and then had the urge to practice guitar. Sorry about that….great video as always and obviously motivational!
Good advice. One additional suggestion: keep a practice journal. I don’t make an entry every practice, but I do make notes 2-3 times a week, noting what I’m working on, at what metronome setting, observations, etc. At the end of each month I summarize what I accomplished and learned, and I plan out goals for the upcoming month. Great way to document your progress, although not as good as recording yourself I do that too, but not as frequently.
"Most jazz music is tonal" ? I doubt that. Bebop (including the Barry Harris system) is not tonal. Most jazz since bebop is not tonal, including: modal jazz, free jazz etc ... . Many old jazz standards before bebop were tonal, but that's it.