Superimposed Bebop Scales & 500 miles high (Jazz Guitar Lesson 97)

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Комментарии • 32

  • @PlayBetterJazz
    @PlayBetterJazz 4 года назад +1

    This is PERFECT for my level, even after studying and playing jazz for 10 years. You also hit on great topics in all of your videos I haven't seen anywhere else. Many thanks!!

  • @guitarpillz268
    @guitarpillz268 2 года назад

    Thank you for this great lesson Mikko! Been watching your videos and learning a lot about bebop scales thanks to you, it's really super useful to hear them used/applied in context.

  • @marshalmcdonald7476
    @marshalmcdonald7476 9 месяцев назад

    Nice and useful stuff here. Thanks.

  • @romainbertrand253
    @romainbertrand253 4 года назад

    Thanks for this great and very clear video.

  • @vadimislearningguitar4977
    @vadimislearningguitar4977 3 года назад

    i love 500 miles high by Azymuth - as an ex bassist - i understand 80 per cent of what you said and played ... but for sure fascinating - and another demonstration of how mathematic music is

  • @charlie86107
    @charlie86107 4 года назад

    Gracias Mikko, un abrazo desde Madrid - Spain

  • @seanbryner5534
    @seanbryner5534 4 года назад

    Great video and great tune!

  • @robinbalean958
    @robinbalean958 4 года назад

    Good video - and I liked the brief appearance of the Captain Haddock cup

    • @Mikkokosmos
      @Mikkokosmos  4 года назад

      Captain Haddock is a great role model 🤠

  • @eternalrainbow-cj3iu
    @eternalrainbow-cj3iu 4 года назад

    Maybe a small detail, but what strike me immediately when looking to this Tune's theme, is that the remarkable endings phrase, as it is there also in this context C-aeolian(instead of C melodic minor)is just the very line that Wes Montgomery improvised over a Tune in E-major(it is on youtube written out) I liked it so much that I was for a while contemplating over it. now I see the exact same thing Chick Corea is using...The Tune of Wes Montgomery is called Here''s that Rainy day...Thank you for this Subtile lesson

  • @stasmaksimov9531
    @stasmaksimov9531 4 года назад

    Great lesson Mikko! 👍🎶🎸

  • @ashandesilvaguitarist
    @ashandesilvaguitarist 4 года назад

    thank you mikko!

  • @JazzGuitarScrapbook
    @JazzGuitarScrapbook 4 года назад +1

    Cool vid, I covered a similar subject a while back. Listen to Mike Brecker is my advice on hearing how this can done....

    • @Mikkokosmos
      @Mikkokosmos  4 года назад

      Interesting. Yes I can totally see Brecker using these kinds of concepts.

  • @eternalrainbow-cj3iu
    @eternalrainbow-cj3iu 4 года назад

    Funny your altered scale, was what I myself always was wondering because my piano teacher told me to play: over E7 E F-G G# Bb c D D# E as a sort of dogma, so I TRIED ALL OTHER SOLUTIONS TO PUT THAT EXTRA 8TH NOTE LATER i FOUND OUT THE THEORY of bop scales that you could put them on more places, I liked it when you put the chromatic extra tone where you do that or even like another pianist of youtube teaching puts t sometimes like: EF GG#A Bb C D E, I know there are 4 tones chromatic...maybe this sound best started from F or D may be best...because accent on the G# as you said endless possibilitie;s....

  • @marshalmcdonald7476
    @marshalmcdonald7476 9 месяцев назад

    Friends, go to 20:31 for visuals of scales.....

  • @bobbybuck6247
    @bobbybuck6247 4 года назад +1

    Can you play two different scales against one chord ,given there is time...say ascend Dorian and descend any other that would fit the chord....?

    • @Mikkokosmos
      @Mikkokosmos  4 года назад +1

      Yes of course :) It's very common to start with a scale that has less tension and then add more tension closer to the resolution. Caravan is a great tune to practice this technique. Listen to Wes's solo on Caravan. Rudresh Mahanthappa sometimes talks about using two-octave scales where he combines two different scales over two octaves.

  • @steveb9325
    @steveb9325 4 года назад

    Nice info. Thank you! What guitar is that? Nylon strings? Thank you again!

  • @isoEH
    @isoEH 4 года назад

    Great presentation! For me that's a new look at the extensions and alternate pentatonics. I'll have to get one of those looper things. Which one are you using?

    • @Mikkokosmos
      @Mikkokosmos  4 года назад

      The RC-1 Loop Station. I use it all the time for practice.

    • @isoEH
      @isoEH 4 года назад

      @@Mikkokosmos Thank you for the reply Mikko! I'll check it out. Sounded good in your vids.

  • @eternalrainbow-cj3iu
    @eternalrainbow-cj3iu 4 года назад

    also for real beginners maybe advisable to try connect scales like A melodic minor or locrian #2 over F#m7b5 or both Aminor possible...maybe first without the bebop not and gradually put it to it...

  • @bobbybuck6247
    @bobbybuck6247 4 года назад

    Hi

    • @bobbybuck6247
      @bobbybuck6247 4 года назад

      Can you play two different scales against one chord ,given there is time...say ascend Dorian and descend any other that would fit the chord....?

  • @BenZussman
    @BenZussman 2 года назад

    Iji
    minimum

    • @Mikkokosmos
      @Mikkokosmos  2 года назад

      I don't know what that means? 🤔

  • @grantgre
    @grantgre 4 года назад

    OK you know I appreciate the video but and you’re playing but you know I really don’t think great players think that they’re playing a phygrean in or Lydian scale you know at the moment they’re playing it you know what I mean I mean if there’s someway you could teach this without putting a name on it that would be so helpful ultimately the music is about sound it’s not about language. I mean you mentioned some scale and it was like not even the pure scale I mean so it was some modified scale I mean what what are we supposed to do with that I’m not gonna memorize that I’m not gonna remember what this modified scale would be I think it when you throw that in it just it really takes away from what I think you mean which is the sound of the scale. How did the great players like Stan Getz West Montgomery Jimmy ponder they were all not literate in music supposedly scales and all that stuff.

    • @bad8400
      @bad8400 4 года назад +1

      you know i’m not there yet but I think learning this stuff, transcribing, and practicing improv over backing tracks will probably get you there. They practiced extensively to express themselves with music, similar to how you learn a language before you can express yourself fluently in it.