Great video, Jens - Short and very Concise! You are making a very good point when recommending the basic harmony as a starting point, so that there is an element of surprise! Thank you so much for posting! 🙏🏽
@@JensLarsen When I had the great fortune to not only study with George Russell but also play in his ensemble back in the 80s he said a lot of jazz history could be divided into vertical versus horizontal players, emphasizing that one was not better than the other - just different. He used the name Lester Young for the horizontal and Coleman Hawkins for the vertical. Just his theory. It reminds me a little of some of what you discuss here.
Wow this is actually a video that explains some stuff that I never understood and that I can sort of make sense of now. In most of your videos I quickly get lost, either because your going to fast for me or I just lack the knowledge or the stamina. I am going to watch this a few more times and take notes of all these examples.
You can slow the video down if you like by clicking on the 'cog' icon on the bottom right hand corner of the page. I always pause and rewind if necessary. If there's something you don't understand, it may be covered in one or more of Jens' other videos, or just Google it
New subscriber won... I've perused many harmony vids but many go into some system I think is superfluous to harmony. Your instruction makes sense to my mind which, briefly, revolves more around leading tones... perhaps the "kind of suspensions" you mention. Still, I must digest. Thanks.
When you listen to a trio or quartet many times they sound much bigger. That's because they're all playing different note. They're not planning on triads. If you account for bass and faithful melody, the rest of the notes are up for grabs. And each note changs the color and weight of the passage. It's a journey over the fretboard thing your ear to recognize the specific tools you want to use. The names are intimidating if you don't understand how chords get their names. In reality, most players are seeking the tones. For me is fascinating to find something on the fingerboard for 600 years, but it's new to me. I have an advantage, I'm playing only to please myself, if I'm happy most of the audience will enjoy the performance.
Perfect timing for me Jens - I've been wondering how to shift my playing from chords to chord moves. I finally picked up my Joe Pass chord book to get some ideas. This video helps!
Great video Jens. I find using substitutions easier than what to call them. I got into trouble last night with this, looked into Chord Chemistry and was even more confused. What I thought was a diminished could be a 7th, flat 9. Or a half diminished could be a 9th. It still sounds good.
I’m a huge fan of your videos- I have watched and studied almost all of them. Question: When you play a song like Blue Moon, and then you reharmonize the second time around, are you making choices in the moment, or did you plan it out ahead of time? I understand the concept of reharmonization, but it takes so much concentration for me. Any idea for how to make it flow? You’re a great teacher - this channel is awesome!
The examples in this video were done ahead of time, but I do reharmonize while I play, It is a matter of getting used to it just like soloing over chords.
@Jens Larsen Your video "Three Bebop Licks You Need to Know" was incredibly helpful to me. I took your advice and have been "composing" bebop lines all week. My playing has suddenly transformed from sounding like "aimless" jazz to having a point. Will you consider publishing a video where you discuss how to incorporate the upper extension intervals? For example I might be looking at a progression that has say an Am7 and I'm wondering if I should play a 9 or b9 or 6 or b6. I can deduce the "correct" note by listening or a little theory but I am curious how you work with the intervals that are not explicitly spelled out by the quality of the chord.
That is great to hear Kenny :) Actually the intervals that are not in the chord are usually a consequence of the context, so the progression and the key. I never read a chord as just Am7, it is always Am7 in some key and in some progression.
@@JensLarsen It looks like you address this in "Jazz Theory 5 Chord Progressions You Need To Recognize and Be Able To Play" in the functional harmony playlist (should others be interested).
Hello, Jens. Thank you for all your videos..they are very helpful. I’m having a hard time getting a jazz tone similar to yours, which is what a I hear in my head. Are you using anything other than reverb? I can’t tell if there is delay or chorus. Thank you. Hope you can respond.
@3:05 I did not get what is ment by 'tritone substitute resolving to the V' and that becomes a Db7. Db7 i suppose here is substitute of G7, so who is V of who ? sorry if stupid question
Thank you Jens, great lesson as always. Is a Tritone substitution ALWAYS used to make a descending bass line ? (F, E, Eb) It seems to be its main function from what I can tell.
A minor subdominant is a chord that has a subdominant function and is borrowed from the minor key. It is not a minor chord 🙂 I talk about them here: ruclips.net/video/RTRo0omubRQ/видео.html
I did not have enough time to understand anything but it sounded beautiful 😁 This is way too dense and too fast for beginners. It would be more usable if you made one video for each type of chord substitution, spending more time on how it works and how to apply the trick in some simple exercise. But thank you for bringing so much value and beautiful sounds !
Thank you Jens! Great video. But I still wonder how to use it in a band context. Start with the „original“ chords in the first A section, then reharmonise the second one. Ok so far. Does the whole band play these chords in every chorus? Or do you vary them from chorus to chorus and everybody needs to react (difficult for a non- pro)?
There is not one answer for that, it will vary on how much you expect people to hear, to react and also how much you want to clash. I am also not saying that you should always do this on the fly (or that you should never do that)
Almost as if you read my mind Jens :) Was about to message you but then noticed this upload discussing almost exactly what it was I was intending to ask. I say almost coz I was gonna ask about subs on a minor 1625. A common sub on a major 1625 is the 1 for a min3. I am not familiar with anything similar in a min1625. You do mention in this vid the tritine sub on the 2, the min7b5, which is something I hadn't considered, so that's new! So broadly my question is now to mix up a minor 1625? I'm in Emin, so have Emin9, Dbø, Gbø, B7alt Was wondering how I could spice this up. In the context of walking bass!
The dutch Mack truck of jazz guitar. Just keeps going. And going. Hauling truckloads of stuff week after week, month after month .. for years now .. I’m a Prius
@@JensLarsen Back in the day there were “hepcats” and as late as the seventies I heard folks in my neighborhood say “I’m hep.” It evolved and with hipsters and hippies we got “I’m hip.” There was a joke in the TV show Madmen where the elder partner corrects someone, “Hep. It’s hep.” You hip?
I of course can’t claim to know which form Parker would have used. Both words have been around a long time. I just have my experience in Pittsburgh back in the day to draw upon, so I found “I am hip,” extra funny. Cheers, D
How The Pros Think About Chord Progressions (and you probably don't)🧨
ruclips.net/video/msmdbxsjmvI/видео.html
You're such a legend, what you're giving the guitar community, we're all very very lucky.
Thank you, Sam! Glad that you think so 🙂
Your stuff is getting richer and richer. Thanks
Glad you like it Paul! 🙂
I've a way to go before I understand this Jens
Some of it is tricky stuff!
I don't understand a thing Jens said , I wish I could, but still I love his style of jazz
Great video, Jens - Short and very Concise! You are making a very good point when recommending the basic harmony as a starting point, so that there is an element of surprise! Thank you so much for posting! 🙏🏽
Glad you like it! 🙂
You have one of the best music instructional videos out there, full of wisdom about the music and it's history. Thanks for doing these.
Glad you like them 🙂 that is really motivating to hear
@@JensLarsen When I had the great fortune to not only study with George Russell but also play in his ensemble back in the 80s he said a lot of jazz history could be divided into vertical versus horizontal players, emphasizing that one was not better than the other - just different. He used the name Lester Young for the horizontal and Coleman Hawkins for the vertical. Just his theory. It reminds me a little of some of what you discuss here.
Jens at his best...awesome teacher...
Fabulous jammer...
🙏
This is a great video. Also there is a difference between chord substitution and reharmonization which you show very well.
Glad it was helpful! Exactly!
Love ya Jens!! Over my head but I'm hoping to absorb a little with each video!
Go for it Jume!
Wow this is actually a video that explains some stuff that I never understood and that I can sort of make sense of now. In most of your videos I quickly get lost, either because your going to fast for me or I just lack the knowledge or the stamina. I am going to watch this a few more times and take notes of all these examples.
Glad to hear it! Remember that you can get a PDF on my website, and maybe the article there is more useful than the video?
You can slow the video down if you like by clicking on the 'cog' icon on the bottom right hand corner of the page. I always pause and rewind if necessary. If there's something you don't understand, it may be covered in one or more of Jens' other videos, or just Google it
Thanks!
Thank you for supporting the channel Bruce! 🙂
Fantastic, Jens. Thanks!
Glad you like it 🙂
New subscriber won... I've perused many harmony vids but many go into some system I think is superfluous to harmony. Your instruction makes sense to my mind which, briefly, revolves more around leading tones... perhaps the "kind of suspensions" you mention.
Still, I must digest. Thanks.
Extraordinary Professor Jens.
Glad you like it 🙂
Those 2 reharms on You Don't Know What Love Is sound really great Jens.
Thank you! :)
Great stuff! I'm gonna re-visit this later when I'm fully awake.
Sorry if it is a bit dense 🙂
@@JensLarsen It's fine, it's me that's a bit dense at this time of day. I caught the general gist of it, I'm looking forward to digging in more later.
When you listen to a trio or quartet many times they sound much bigger. That's because they're all playing different note. They're not planning on triads. If you account for bass and faithful melody, the rest of the notes are up for grabs. And each note changs the color and weight of the passage. It's a journey over the fretboard thing your ear to recognize the specific tools you want to use. The names are intimidating if you don't understand how chords get their names. In reality, most players are seeking the tones. For me is fascinating to find something on the fingerboard for 600 years, but it's new to me. I have an advantage, I'm playing only to please myself, if I'm happy most of the audience will enjoy the performance.
This is so good and well explained. Can hardly wait to work on this. Thanks, Jens!
Glad it was helpful! Go for it!
Great jazz music is all about the details!
Fantastic Jens! I love this type of thing.
Thank you Derryl! Makes my day 🙂
@@JensLarsen 🙂
Excellent explanation of what can be an overwhelming subject. Well done!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Perfect timing for me Jens - I've been wondering how to shift my playing from chords to chord moves. I finally picked up my Joe Pass chord book to get some ideas. This video helps!
Great, Ben! 🙂
Thanks for the reminder in regards to the Joe Pass chord book. I've got one stored away. Gotta go pull it out. 😊
Great video Jens. I find using substitutions easier than what to call them. I got into trouble last night with this, looked into Chord Chemistry and was even more confused. What I thought was a diminished could be a 7th, flat 9. Or a half diminished could be a 9th. It still sounds good.
Ok, That is not really what I would consider a substitution since it will sound like the same chord in the context.
Excellent theme, animations are great.
Thank you! :)
Great, Jens!
Glad you like it!
I’m a huge fan of your videos- I have watched and studied almost all of them. Question: When you play a song like Blue Moon, and then you reharmonize the second time around, are you making choices in the moment, or did you plan it out ahead of time? I understand the concept of reharmonization, but it takes so much concentration for me. Any idea for how to make it flow?
You’re a great teacher - this channel is awesome!
The examples in this video were done ahead of time, but I do reharmonize while I play, It is a matter of getting used to it just like soloing over chords.
Great job thank you Jens 5:25
Best lesson on chord substitution I have seen! Thank you!
Thank you 🙂
great lesson!
Glad you liked it!
Again love you videos. You just helped my solved a Tim Christensen number☺️
Do you know some good videos or books about, how to read notes and rythme?
That's great! :)
3:08 like the Bb7 in Beautiful Love 😃
Beautiful examples. Thank you for another excellent tutorial
Thanks! Actually it isn't a reharmonization there, Eø with E in the melody is not that great :)
@Jens Larsen Your video "Three Bebop Licks You Need to Know" was incredibly helpful to me. I took your advice and have been "composing" bebop lines all week. My playing has suddenly transformed from sounding like "aimless" jazz to having a point. Will you consider publishing a video where you discuss how to incorporate the upper extension intervals? For example I might be looking at a progression that has say an Am7 and I'm wondering if I should play a 9 or b9 or 6 or b6. I can deduce the "correct" note by listening or a little theory but I am curious how you work with the intervals that are not explicitly spelled out by the quality of the chord.
That is great to hear Kenny :)
Actually the intervals that are not in the chord are usually a consequence of the context, so the progression and the key. I never read a chord as just Am7, it is always Am7 in some key and in some progression.
@@JensLarsen It looks like you address this in "Jazz Theory 5 Chord Progressions You Need To Recognize and Be Able To Play" in the functional harmony playlist (should others be interested).
Good video Jens thank you
Glad you like it 🙂
What s beautiful video. Thanks
Glad you like it! 🙂
いつも拝見しております。コードの流れを知る事で曲が抜群にきらびやかになりますね!
Great lesson!
Thank you 🙂
This is excellent.
Glad you like it!
La musique qui parle! Quel beau cours! Merci!
Glad you like it 🙂
I love bill evans.
Hello, Jens. Thank you for all your videos..they are very helpful. I’m having a hard time getting a jazz tone similar to yours, which is what a I hear in my head. Are you using anything other than reverb? I can’t tell if there is delay or chorus. Thank you. Hope you can respond.
Sometimes I use a delay as well, but not always. That is actually it 🙂
@3:05 I did not get what is ment by 'tritone substitute resolving to the V' and that becomes a Db7. Db7 i suppose here is substitute of G7, so who is V of who ? sorry if stupid question
It is in the context of that II V so in this case the V is C7 in Gø C7 Fm6. Does that help?
@@JensLarsen yes I got it now. Many thanks for replying and all your videos !
Surely that’s the RC in The Hague at 5:01. They moved to a new location in January 2022
Yes, but this is the building where I studied and later worked. Seemed more appropriate
Jens, what program do you use for video editing? and... do you have a video about it? It's very well done. And... the content is solid gold.
Thank you Joseph! I work together with a very talented editor and we work with Premiere Pro. There are entire channels dedicated to Adobe Premiere 🙂
Thank you. I appreciate you taking the time to respond.
@@savagetofu1 If you are looking for an editor then Luciano's email is in the video description, but I don't know if he has time.
Thank you Jens, great lesson as always. Is a Tritone substitution ALWAYS used to make a descending bass line ? (F, E, Eb) It seems to be its main function from what I can tell.
I think it is as much a way to create a surprising sound on the dominant with notes from outside the key that resolves smoothly
@@JensLarsen thank you 😊
Wonderful
Thank you
Great tutorial!!! The only question I have is why are Abmaj7 and Dbmaj7 minor subdominant chords in C major? They look like maj7 chords...
A minor subdominant is a chord that has a subdominant function and is borrowed from the minor key. It is not a minor chord 🙂
I talk about them here: ruclips.net/video/RTRo0omubRQ/видео.html
keep the song in there ! ! 😅😅... great vid, thatks 🙏🙏
Exactly! 🙂
All about tastefulness, the hardest thing to learn in music
I did not have enough time to understand anything but it sounded beautiful 😁 This is way too dense and too fast for beginners. It would be more usable if you made one video for each type of chord substitution, spending more time on how it works and how to apply the trick in some simple exercise. But thank you for bringing so much value and beautiful sounds !
Thanks! Reharmonization is anyway not a beginner topic. You need to know some songs before that even begins to become relevant 🙂
Very nice dissonant chords! Here I can hear bits of Ted Greene and Tim Lerch :)
Thank you Jens! Great video. But I still wonder how to use it in a band context. Start with the „original“ chords in the first A section, then reharmonise the second one. Ok so far. Does the whole band play these chords in every chorus? Or do you vary them from chorus to chorus and everybody needs to react (difficult for a non- pro)?
There is not one answer for that, it will vary on how much you expect people to hear, to react and also how much you want to clash. I am also not saying that you should always do this on the fly (or that you should never do that)
Thanks! Ok creativity seems to be key 🙃
Do you not have a jazz album or album your involved in per si? I searched Apple Music and couldn’t find
Almost as if you read my mind Jens :) Was about to message you but then noticed this upload discussing almost exactly what it was I was intending to ask. I say almost coz I was gonna ask about subs on a minor 1625. A common sub on a major 1625 is the 1 for a min3. I am not familiar with anything similar in a min1625. You do mention in this vid the tritine sub on the 2, the min7b5, which is something I hadn't considered, so that's new! So broadly my question is now to mix up a minor 1625?
I'm in Emin, so have
Emin9, Dbø, Gbø, B7alt
Was wondering how I could spice this up.
In the context of walking bass!
Em6 C#ø F#ø B7
Em6 G7 F#ø B7
Em6 G7 C7 B7
Em6 D7 C7 B7
Em6 G7 Cmaj7 F7
Em6 G7 Cm7 F7
Em6 Fdim F#m7 B7
Em6 G7 Amaj7 F7
Maybe one of these?
ciao Jens posso chiederti un consiglio per una chitarra sui 1000 euro? grazie e complimenti per i tuoi video
The dutch Mack truck of jazz guitar. Just keeps going. And going. Hauling truckloads of stuff week after week, month after month .. for years now .. I’m a Prius
I noticed pat methany b sections will be all majors go from a flat major to c major. Are we getting there because a flat has c g in it?
I don't know. Which song are you referring to?
But I want to also know systems and rules!😇😇😇
Love ❤️ ❤️🙏🎵🎶🎼🎸✌️👌🍀🇮🇱
My hands hurt just looking at some of those changes... Any advice for people who don't have huge hands?
It is most likely not about the size of your hand, and more you posture and how you position the hand on the neck.
Actually lol’d @ 8:07
I found I can take 1 chord and replace it with a 251 of that chord-scale.
holy crap. this whole time, I thought I was a musician! silly me.
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.....
WWWW YEA!!???
Apropos Bird… I’m hep. It’s hep. 😂
Lovely moves, Jens!
Thanks Daniel! I don't follow the reference 😁
@@JensLarsen Back in the day there were “hepcats” and as late as the seventies I heard folks in my neighborhood say “I’m hep.” It evolved and with hipsters and hippies we got “I’m hip.” There was a joke in the TV show Madmen where the elder partner corrects someone, “Hep. It’s hep.” You hip?
I of course can’t claim to know which form Parker would have used. Both words have been around a long time. I just have my experience in Pittsburgh back in the day to draw upon, so I found “I am hip,” extra funny. Cheers, D
Man I love your teaching but could you cool it on the editing?
I actually get a lot of comments that people really like the editing, and that is also what the retention data I see in RUclips says.
Is is just me - all of these videos are like jazz - moving along way too fast for me to catch even a single thing!
Well, it would only be you that could judge if they are too fast for you. In general, the rest seem pretty happy with the video :)
If only there was a way to pause it ;-)
Hi Jens, I love your stuff, but why do you speak so fast... ? have mercy with the people who try to follow your explanations.
Right now, it really seems like that is what most people prefer and what keeps people watching, so that is why I do it like that.
He even talks way to fast.