Thanks, it is a great tutorial.For people like me starting, yes there is a ton of stuff to learn, but you are great at teaching the way jazz should feel
Very nice lesson ! I'm really into that approach of focusing on every single extension and alteration instead of thinking nonesense altered scales and therefore properly knowing what effect each one produces...The fact that you don't always know the chords corresponding to it shows that this approach lets you focus on your melodic approach rather than being lost in theoretical matters while you're playing (whether chorusing or comping)
I think sometimes a keyboard player will use all the extensions in a thirteenth chord to include the 9th and sometimes also the 11th. As guitarists we often play "partial" chords simply because we're limited to how many fingers we can have on the fretboard at any one time. The most important thing is how it sounds to you and whether or not it works with what your band-mates are playing.
About that "making it more 13th-like" by adding the 9th : I can hear that and it sounds great, but what I don't get is the process leading to it...Is it a way to emphasize the 13th with a perfect 5th interval ?
Jon Dalton's a class act!
Great guitar playing Jon!!!
Great video Jd
Thanks, it is a great tutorial.For people like me starting, yes there is a ton of stuff to learn, but you are great at teaching the way jazz should feel
Very nice lesson ! I'm really into that approach of focusing on every single extension and alteration instead of thinking nonesense altered scales and therefore properly knowing what effect each one produces...The fact that you don't always know the chords corresponding to it shows that this approach lets you focus on your melodic approach rather than being lost in theoretical matters while you're playing (whether chorusing or comping)
Very nice Jon
Mind blown.
you have made me realize that everything i should have learned throughout my life i just didnt......
Thank you very much!!
tom delonge's guitar... love
Cool lesson!
I think sometimes a keyboard player will use all the extensions in a thirteenth chord to include the 9th and sometimes also the 11th. As guitarists we often play "partial" chords simply because we're limited to how many fingers we can have on the fretboard at any one time. The most important thing is how it sounds to you and whether or not it works with what your band-mates are playing.
Ok, thanks for your answer !
About that "making it more 13th-like" by adding the 9th : I can hear that and it sounds great, but what I don't get is the process leading to it...Is it a way to emphasize the 13th with a perfect 5th interval ?
I almost understood 10% of what you were trying to teach us.
No, I'm joking, but isn't it beautiful how stupidly complex all that jazz is?
jezz, its OK if you get closer to the camera
You are too far from the viewer....BUT teaching concept is OK!