This strategy of looping one chord, arpeggiating over it, finding all the inversions, triads, and voicings, and listening to what each sounds like is a perfect and valuable addition to my practice! Thank you! ❤
I'm loving your (maybe unintentional) series of focusing on these basics and ways to explore them rather than the common RUclips algorithm focus of more and more complex concepts that 99% of people aren't anywhere close to ready for (how many more videos do we really need on triad pairs?). With a handful more of these kinds of videos i could see your channel becoming THE place for beginners to get practical advice to get on the right path
I've been working on practicing to play the changes for a while and I recently started to look at the relationship of chord tones to the tonic scale. As long as the chord changes are diatonic, it's really helpful to see that the chord tones are simply part of the scale too. I don't quite know how that wasn't obvious to me from the get go but it certainly makes sense that I used to simply improvise over songs without even knowing what the chords were or which one happened to be playing at any given moment. I have now gotten much better about knowing where I am in a form and can think of chord tones but I want to also go back to simply playing melodic ideas from the scale sometimes. Thanks for your videos Tina, they are really helpful!
This strategy of looping one chord, arpeggiating over it, finding all the inversions, triads, and voicings, and listening to what each sounds like is a perfect and valuable addition to my practice! Thank you! ❤
I'm loving your (maybe unintentional) series of focusing on these basics and ways to explore them rather than the common RUclips algorithm focus of more and more complex concepts that 99% of people aren't anywhere close to ready for (how many more videos do we really need on triad pairs?). With a handful more of these kinds of videos i could see your channel becoming THE place for beginners to get practical advice to get on the right path
It's like mindfulness for music. I'm just at the very start of learning jazz and this is excellent to get the sounds embedded in my ear and mind.
This is great! You keep coming up with creative ways to teach jazz guitar that I don't see on other channels. It really resonates with me.
Thanks for your time, this is super helpful!! You're a great teacher.
You're very welcome!
I've been working on practicing to play the changes for a while and I recently started to look at the relationship of chord tones to the tonic scale. As long as the chord changes are diatonic, it's really helpful to see that the chord tones are simply part of the scale too. I don't quite know how that wasn't obvious to me from the get go but it certainly makes sense that I used to simply improvise over songs without even knowing what the chords were or which one happened to be playing at any given moment.
I have now gotten much better about knowing where I am in a form and can think of chord tones but I want to also go back to simply playing melodic ideas from the scale sometimes. Thanks for your videos Tina, they are really helpful!
Thank you so much...
That was very very interesting! 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
What a great method! Thank Tina!
Thank you so much. Such a great lesson x
excellent practice ideas- thanks for sharing 👍😊
My pleasure 😊
Great lesson
nice lesson and demonstration ✨
Thank you! 😃
Merci beaucoup pour cette super leçon !
de rien !
Great video! What model Ibanez is that?
Ringo Starr Signatur 12 String Classic Modell ☝️
John Scofield model the name is on the truss rod cover at 6:55