This is Why You're Confused about Jazz Scales

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
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    LESSON NOTES:
    "Which scale should I play over this chord?"
    It's a common question.
    In this video I show you a method that works every time. It's simple, but it generates complex scales.
    And it works on all Jazz chord types: maj 7, min 7, V7, min 7 b5, dim 7, V7#5, and more.
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    EPIC MOMENTS:
    0:42 The chordal tones + whole-step technique
    0:54 C Major 7 = C Lydian scale
    2:00 C Minor 7 = C Dorian scale
    3:12 C7 = C Lydian-Dominant scale
    5:44 Applying this to a Jazz standard, 'Misty'
    9:33 Final Words / Jazz piano email tips
    ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
    WATCH MY EAR TRAINING VIDEO SERIES:
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @jonathanwingmusic
    @jonathanwingmusic 4 года назад +447

    Very nice! One quick "hack" that had me thinking of this without having to manually count a whole tone from each individual chordal tone is:
    - maj7 = add the next major chord a whole step up (Cmaj7 + Dmaj)
    - min7 = add the next minor chord a whole step up (Cm7 + Dm)
    - dom7 = add the next major chord a whole step up (C7 + Dmaj)

    • @AwareLife
      @AwareLife 4 года назад +11

      Cool hack!

    • @Juda_music
      @Juda_music 4 года назад +6

      jonathanwing this is really cool thanks!

    • @chrishenkyes
      @chrishenkyes 4 года назад +4

      genius hack broh...

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 4 года назад +5

      Very accurate so far..I like to this with whole half.dim scales and half whole dim scales...just do the same basic dim7 chords and move them up a 1/2 or 1 step. Eg.
      C Eb Gb A up 1 step D F Ab B..
      The scales for C dim7 for the whole half ..is C D Eb F Gb Ab A B C.

    • @rolux4853
      @rolux4853 4 года назад +1

      Man that really helps while improvising!
      Much easier than thinking „individual note + whole step“.
      With your way I can let the music flow like it should, thank you very much!

  • @samuelbeltrami5647
    @samuelbeltrami5647 4 года назад +482

    God i hate that "play Queen songs with simply piano" ad...

    • @ericofadel
      @ericofadel 4 года назад +7

      Install ublock. It will make most of the ads go away.

    • @rolux4853
      @rolux4853 4 года назад +7

      Erico Fadel since most people watch videos on their iPad this sadly doesn’t cut it.

    • @bragtime1052
      @bragtime1052 4 года назад +20

      Ro Lux statistically most people don’t own an iPad.

    • @maeilum
      @maeilum 4 года назад +1

      @@bragtime1052 fax

    • @dileepajayasekera6501
      @dileepajayasekera6501 4 года назад +2

      You have to get RUclips Premium so you won't get ads again.

  • @sebprovision
    @sebprovision 5 лет назад +263

    When you demonstrated the Dorian scale you played it like the melody from Wu-Tang - C.R.E.A.M - respect ;)

    • @BeatsByGemsmiff
      @BeatsByGemsmiff 4 года назад +19

      Obeisant i was gonna call it the wu tang scale

    • @rhythmculturerecords1017
      @rhythmculturerecords1017 3 года назад +2

      heard that. its probably as sample from a different original, but absolutely the melody. From CREAM

    • @rhythmculturerecords1017
      @rhythmculturerecords1017 3 года назад +4

      The Charmels - As Long as I've Got You (1967)

    • @TheTonyTitan
      @TheTonyTitan 3 года назад +1

      Soon as I heard it I was like, I GOTTA LEARN HOW TO PLAY THIS

    • @thespeedofthought8206
      @thespeedofthought8206 3 года назад +2

      I only checked the comments to see who else picked up on that.. Lol

  • @dylanduke1075
    @dylanduke1075 5 лет назад +73

    Why the hell does this not come up when I search “How to Play Jazz” “Jazz Tips” or “Jazz Piano”???? This is so useful. Thanks man.

  • @leophoenixmusic
    @leophoenixmusic 6 лет назад +128

    6:40 *plays licc* - silence - “That sounds great” XD

  • @marcopepe4046
    @marcopepe4046 6 лет назад +584

    Dear Julian,
    this is the best shortcut I've ever learned to find or memorize any scale from chord. Superb!!!
    An hug from Italy!

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +15

      Arr that means a lot to me Marco, so glad I posted his one.
      Big hugs back, I hope to help you more in future too

    • @leonardojivalino9310
      @leonardojivalino9310 6 лет назад

      Jazz Tutorial Hello Julian, your tutorial is great and i'm trying to learn from it. I have a question? How do i implement the scale if i want to play a song?

    • @jacksonguitariste1449
      @jacksonguitariste1449 5 лет назад

      I am also in Italy but lack a band

    • @georgesonm1774
      @georgesonm1774 5 лет назад +1

      @@leonardojivalino9310 play licks or just think up melodies within a certain scale, I think is the idea :)

    • @leonardojivalino9310
      @leonardojivalino9310 5 лет назад

      @@georgesonm1774 What do you think if i play cannon in D but with another scale and not the major scale? Will it work?

  • @Ekklesia803
    @Ekklesia803 3 года назад +20

    0:53 *Lydian Scale* _(Major 7 Chords)_
    2:00 *Dorian Scale* _(Minor 7 Chords)_
    3:10 *Lydian-Dominant (Mixolydian) Scale* _(Dominant 7 Chords)_

  • @Shouzeegestof
    @Shouzeegestof 6 лет назад +10

    I came back here just to say how incredibly useful this tip has been for me. Thank you so much Julian, I suddenly feel a lot more "fluent".

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you so much Shouzeegestof. I have some more videos on scales planned.
      In the meantime you might like this blog post I wrote on memorizing scales too:
      www.themusicalear.com/how-to-learn-new-scales-quickly-easily/

  • @itsjoebrown123
    @itsjoebrown123 6 лет назад +288

    The melody at 2:50 is from "CREAM" by The Wu-Tang Clan. Originally from "As Long As I Got You" by The Charmels !

    • @TelowVaughnMusic
      @TelowVaughnMusic 6 лет назад +15

      congrats, Joe...

    • @kokoshinful
      @kokoshinful 6 лет назад +9

      Dollar dollar bill yoooo

    • @tralalalatrollin
      @tralalalatrollin 5 лет назад

      Cash Rules Everything Around Me

    • @thekeysman6760
      @thekeysman6760 5 лет назад +2

      +Steve Kp It's y'all, i.e. you all. Not yo, as in hello. That would sound silly, wouldn't it? Going up to someone and saying "Hey, yo", when actually you mean "Hey, y'all". You're welcome.

    • @unicornhorn6662
      @unicornhorn6662 5 лет назад +2

      Steve Kp "yo" LMFAO

  • @ayorobotussin927
    @ayorobotussin927 6 лет назад +1088

    CREAM get the money, Dolla Dolla bill ya

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +46

      There it is - well spotted Ayorobotussin!

    • @HozuTV
      @HozuTV 6 лет назад +16

      you forgot method man sucking spit back into his mouth in the lyrics.... so it would be " CREAM, get the money,* method man sucking spit back into his mouth* Dolla Dolla Bill Y'all."

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +8

      Haha so true Josh! I need to go listen to that song again just for that

    • @plumhunter9158
      @plumhunter9158 6 лет назад +2

      Where does this come from? What does it mean

    • @itemps
      @itemps 6 лет назад +13

      Plum Hunter wutang clan bro, come on

  • @ctimur
    @ctimur 5 лет назад +21

    4:22 that scale is used in Polish mountaineer music, too. This scale in Polish is called Skala Góralska

    • @Radical_Middle
      @Radical_Middle 5 лет назад

      I second that, it is used quite often in polish mountain folk music.

    • @witoldwrobel4331
      @witoldwrobel4331 4 года назад

      Lol, I couldn't expect that I learn some jazz theory and meet an old friend. szymek!

    • @dawncordo
      @dawncordo 4 года назад

      Are polish scales different from western classical music? Or are they the same and have different names?

    • @crade9126
      @crade9126 4 года назад

      jak to nas uczą w szkole muzycznej
      "4ty podwyższony i 7 obniżony"

    • @sofin8191
      @sofin8191 3 года назад +1

      @@dawncordo It depends. Classical music in a traditional meaning in similar in all of the Europe. It grounds on two scales: major (durowa) and minor (molowa). Polish folk music uses scales, who aren't very different to the western folk music scales (I think): dorian (dorycka), phrygian (frygijska), lydian (lidyjska) and mixolydian (miksolidyjska) with it's hypo- types. The oldest polish folksongs use narrow-ranged scales: tetrachord scales and two sorts of pentatonic. The newer songs are based on minor and major. The lydian-dominant (góralska) scale is special because it is used only in Tatra mountains. It was an inspiration for some composers of the twenteenth centaury, for example Karol Szymanowski or Wojciech Kilar. If I made a mistake, please true up.

  • @johnsonjam4143
    @johnsonjam4143 6 лет назад +12

    5:58
    U turn the heat down man.
    Soooo soothing & relief!!!!

  • @pradheesandeepana
    @pradheesandeepana 6 лет назад +10

    Hey Julian ! You’re the best jazz piano teacher ! You never drag the story or lie and waste time ! Everything you say is so clear and so understandable ! And unique ! Thank you very much !

  • @krisdarie3980
    @krisdarie3980 5 лет назад +24

    Where has this been all my life. This will make my guitar solos seem simpler. Never looked at it this way

  • @paolomaggi8188
    @paolomaggi8188 4 года назад +15

    Wow !!! You are a fantastic teacher! Finally someone who explains difficult concepts in an incredibly simple way !! Thanks so much!!

    • @joeyblogsy
      @joeyblogsy Год назад

      Yeah there aren’t many. Most lie and will make out like it’s this big mystery with no particular formula whereby the only way you can achieve it is to summon the jazz gods with your hidden talent. Eg your typical ass hole musician. That or they just have no clue how to teach correctly.

  • @eazyproductions3343
    @eazyproductions3343 2 года назад

    I seriously love how you just don’t give us the chords you explain them and you honestly make it seem easy and make it so we can learn. Love your vids keep it up!!!

  • @BATTIS94
    @BATTIS94 6 лет назад +270

    This lesson changed my life!

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +13

      I'm so pleased to hear this BATTIS94 - I know that this is a common question people have, because I hear it a lot.
      I should say that you always have a choice of scales you can play - there's never just one - but this method ALWAYS sounds good, especially if you don't have a specific plan or scale in mind.
      Do you have any other video requests?

    • @BATTIS94
      @BATTIS94 6 лет назад +4

      Thank you for the reply. I'm new to jazz and this kind of improvisation. I'm a music theory oriented kind of guy so I usually need to make an analysis beforehand if I want to play something interesting. So this technique is amazing to come up with something fresh on the spot! Regarding your question, since I'm subbed I'm constantly blown away by you videos, I'm learning things I didn't thought I could learn hahaha and I'm still going through your older videos, so I have nothing to request yet.

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +7

      Arr that makes my day. Glad you like the videos.
      I don't know if you're already part of the Jazz Tutorial email newsletter, but I send out additional tips like this every week - most of which I haven't made videos on. The sign up link is at:
      www.themusicalear.com/jazz-piano-email-tips

    • @BATTIS94
      @BATTIS94 6 лет назад +1

      I am, thank you!

    • @jedimindtrix2142
      @jedimindtrix2142 5 лет назад +1

      @@jazztutorial This helps guitar, bass, violin...any instrumentist really. A lot of guitarists have a hard time understanding modes. Seeing it laid out on piano from left to right makes it really easy to understand. Ill be pointing my students to your video in the future and using it to help explain modes during lessons. Good one man!

  • @tiffanyonwudinanti
    @tiffanyonwudinanti 6 лет назад +90

    This was much needed. Love the easy approach!

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +1

      Glad this one helped Tiffany, these are the sort of tips I post every week in the email newsletter.

  • @rupertseptimus27
    @rupertseptimus27 5 лет назад +10

    Great lesson Julian - as a guitarist it's so good to be able to see how the scales relate to the chords - not so easy with the guitar fretboard. Thanks.

  • @TookMe20min2findThis
    @TookMe20min2findThis 5 лет назад +26

    the most efficient jazz lesson I've watched in along time. Thank you!

  • @Gapetz
    @Gapetz 5 лет назад +24

    He sounded like Korg from Thor Ragnrok on 0:00

    • @rocfareal
      @rocfareal 4 года назад

      Clive Wasilin 😂😂

  • @AugustoADuarte1
    @AugustoADuarte1 6 лет назад +10

    The Lydian Dominant scale is also very common on north-eastern brazilian folk music. Kinda specific and not very widespread, but definitely worth it checking genres such as forró, xote, baião, etc :) Awesome vid! Love the tips, I'll certainly put it to use

    • @3mnpourlepianojazz670
      @3mnpourlepianojazz670 5 лет назад

      NEW jazz piano tuto. ruclips.net/video/6XaJPqX_k7s/видео.html

  • @jeneelfrench5767
    @jeneelfrench5767 5 лет назад +2

    THANK YOU!! I just picked up the saxophone and have an audition in a month and you just saved my life so yeah.

  • @liamlawson3915
    @liamlawson3915 4 года назад +2

    Every now and again you find a piece of information or a concept that is like a lightbulb moment that you know will change you as a musician forever. For me this was one of those times, thank you

  • @TorkilZachariassenTZNG
    @TorkilZachariassenTZNG 6 лет назад +62

    What a great tip. Thank you. One quick way to remember the 9 11 13 triad is to think of it as a chord on top of the original four tone chord: D/Cmaj7, Dm/Cm7, D/C7 and D°/Cm7b5

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 6 лет назад +2

      Torkil Zachariassen Using the slash chords as way to see this very good.. I like to write things out as I go..eh your tip.. cegbb d f# a. . I write things out in detail so I can remember this and it may help the beginners.

    • @marcpaters0n
      @marcpaters0n 5 лет назад +2

      Wow, this is handy for me as I have trouble with extensions all the time.

    • @nezkeys79
      @nezkeys79 5 лет назад +2

      Yup ive always been a supporter of slash chords or poly chords to quickly learn exotic chords. I used use the same technique to learn 13 chords when i first started playing jazz.
      Id write Gm/Ab (Ab D G Bb) and the guitarist would say but thats not Bb13. Well if the bass is playing the root it is LOL.
      Another one again if bassist is playing root...Em7/Ab is Bb13b9

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 2 года назад

      Love the slash chord format. Saves a lot of time.

  • @Sirvalorsax
    @Sirvalorsax 5 лет назад +17

    do you play more hip-hop jazz? diggin' the "cream"

  • @WaldyDiazOficial
    @WaldyDiazOficial 5 лет назад

    Wow!!! The best explanation ever!! My deepest respect and gratitude!! AMAZING!

  • @brackemyerfamily5190
    @brackemyerfamily5190 5 лет назад +1

    as some one who has little to no theory knowledge this has been hands down the best video ive ever seen explaining jazz scales. so helpful, i am so appreciative.

  • @makisGibs
    @makisGibs 6 лет назад +3

    it is always amazing to look at a different perspective of music theory. Keep up the good work and share your findings. thanks, man!

  • @creature_skin
    @creature_skin 5 лет назад +5

    Oh man I love a bit of life-changing music theory in the morning

    • @DICACIO1
      @DICACIO1 5 лет назад

      On ALL MAJOR CHORDS, you have a 1-3-5, right? Like C-E-G for C major triad chord, yeah?. ...Ok, play a B minor TRIAD over a C-G-C or C-G-B in the Bass. That turns any regular basic C major triad into a C major 7th chord. Now, Play a D major triad over C in the Bass to make it a C major 9 chord. See how easy that is!? 😂😂😂
      Using the Triad method, you always learn faster!
      Also, for every minor or major triad you are using, learn how to use every INVERSION and/or Position possible on your keyboard or piano 👍👍Move that specific Triad up and down the entire Piano until you can play it with your eyes closed like Stevie Wonder would teach you in person LOL!
      The reason for that is so you MASTER how to MOVE around the keyboard during solos, or like, when you need to help the SINGER sing better, because LOCATION is everything when playing the piano! hahaha
      Here's some more Happy fun Tricks to use:
      On ALL MINOR Chords, play a major triad for the 3rd note, and a minor triad for the 5th note.
      So you put A-E-A or A-E-G in the BASS and play a C major triad for the A minor 7th chord. Play an E minor chord over A in the bass for the A minor 9 chord. Yup, it's that easy!
      You can also find tons of other amazing chords by using all the other minor and major chords, sus 4, sus 2 triads over any BASS NOTE in your left hand. In fact, you will become a Monster on the keyboard/piano way FASTER this way!
      You can also play a C minor triad of A in the Bass, or E major over A in the Bass to figure out how to use it for different music styles. Your ears will guide you and let you know which KEY you are suppose to use those special chords for, but that's the FUN in learning how to experiment with music. No strict Rules, just have FUN! Play whatever you think sounds good to YOU, not what sounds good to anyone else.
      On any "TURN AROUND" dominant 5th CHORD you use before going back to the "home chord", you can come down on it's MAJOR TRIAD it belongs to. For Example in the Key of G Major:
      Use a G major Triad with D-A-D in the Bass. Then, while still sustaining a D in the Bass, do lots of RUNS up and down the G Major scale. and then resolve to a G' chord or Gadd2 (Gadd9) chord, or a basic Gsus4 chord to the G chord to end the song. LOL
      Also with a G-D-G or G-D-F as the Bass notes, you can come down on a D major triad or an E major Triad to make it sound extremely MATURE, Beautiful and very Jazzy. That's a kool trick to know for Gospel and R&B music styles 💥🎹👀
      The SECRET of playing really good, is learning ALL the user-friendly tricks. So, learning which Triads work for each ROOT note in the Bass is what you need to practice for hours and hours!
      ... Always ANALYZE what you're doing in the right hand. Ask yourself these questions:
      Am I playing a 7th chord, a minor 9th, a major 9th, a dominant 7th flat 9 or dominant 7th flat 13 chord??...or is this a regular dominant 13 chord?? What chord is this TRIAD creating? Why am I playing so much better now!? How did I get so good so fast!? YAY!! 😂😂😂🎵🎵
      BEGINNER students learn FASTER when you explain things MUCH EASIER to them. They "get it" and understand it using TRIADS way quicker than any other method out there! 👍👍🔥🔥
      Never forget...People get LOST when you use words like "semi-tones, whole steps and half steps, a tone, two tones, 3 whole step and a half..." etc etc
      The PIANO IS A VISUAL INSTRUMENT. Keyboard and Piano Students naturally see things FASTER when they think of Triads, not "mathematical equations" or complicated explanations as to WHY this note is a 6th and 13th, or a 4 and 11th note at the same damn time LOL! 😹
      Cheers! Enjoy these amazing New Tricks and Short-cuts, My amazing Friend! Hahaha

  • @BassTromBen
    @BassTromBen 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for these videos. I got my degree in classical bass trombone performance, and I always played in big bands, but my teachers didn’t take my requests to learn jazz seriously. As a 46 year old who’s now learning on my own, I understand a lot about theory, so the chords aren’t necessarily a mystery, but feeling confident with my scale choices has been a real hang up. You’ve given me an incredibly useful tool. ❤️

  • @Pedro-tm6ue
    @Pedro-tm6ue 5 лет назад

    What holds me back every time I learn a new jazz "thing" (I'm just a beginner to this) is that it always looks terrible for me in the begining (like the start of this video) but when you put it together you create beautiful music.

  • @pianovocals87
    @pianovocals87 6 лет назад +65

    Julian, your tips are worth gold! Thank you so much for sharing, mate.
    I never comment on youtube videos, but I just had to log in to tell you that.
    All the best from Germany.

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад

      Arr that means a lot Peter - especially that you went to the hassle to log in just to post this (I know the feeling). Thank you for doing that, and I'm so pleased this video helped.
      Are you subscribed to my email tips? If not I've written loads just like this lesson - on reharm, improv, Tritone sub, etc.

  • @ClaudioDesideriMusic
    @ClaudioDesideriMusic 5 лет назад +5

    Mate, this is definitely one of the best hour of study I had. It was a pleasure to play along learning from you, thanks!

  • @EL-IAO77
    @EL-IAO77 4 года назад

    Excelente conteúdo e apresentação, muito obrigado!

  • @jamessanders2007
    @jamessanders2007 5 лет назад

    Legend mate. You know how long I've been waiting for a method that logically makes sense and is not ambiguous? Forever. Thanks heaps

  • @theshipissinkingno6056
    @theshipissinkingno6056 5 лет назад +4

    This is good, useable, info using simple concepts. Anybody with basic theory should be able to take this and run.

    • @3mnpourlepianojazz670
      @3mnpourlepianojazz670 5 лет назад

      NEW jazz piano tuto. ruclips.net/video/6XaJPqX_k7s/видео.html

  • @SamMicheck1
    @SamMicheck1 4 года назад +3

    You have answered my questions, may God bless dear, I have been looking for Jazz scales

  • @dans.4222
    @dans.4222 3 года назад +1

    This was mega-helpfull! I was getting bored jamming over Major and Minor scales, but I had no idea where to start with giving my music a more "jazzier" feel. Thanks alot!

  • @davidpauker
    @davidpauker 4 года назад +1

    Thank-you so much Junior for teaching me this method!!Today you have finally ended so many years of confusion about this and have simplified the process!!I feel like you have given me the keys to the Kingdom!!One of the best jazz secrets piano videos that I've ever come across...worth its weight in GOLD!! Thanx for ending so many years of confusion that I have had about which scales to play over which jazz chords!! I feel like an enlightened Yogi who has just had one of those AH-HA moments!! So thank-you master!!! My years of confusion have finally come to an end!!!I can't thank-you enough!!

  • @robertbarkho4098
    @robertbarkho4098 5 лет назад +4

    If I'm not wrong.
    to make it easier,
    if the triad you're playing is a major( regardless if it's a 7 Or M7), then "ADD AND" play "major triad" whole step above ,
    if the first triad you're playing is a minor (e.g. Cm7) then ADD AND play a "minor triad" a whole step above .

    • @tobybromfield3664
      @tobybromfield3664 5 лет назад +1

      Ah thanks for this bro! I just checked, you're right. Makes it a lot easier

    • @RolandoCruz
      @RolandoCruz 5 лет назад

      It is easier your method.

  • @ziqinggu6085
    @ziqinggu6085 5 лет назад +4

    Great Job!
    CMaj7: C E G B ,all whole step up,we get D、F#、 A and C#,we have a C# whitch you did not mention on Maj7 Chord。 In years of practicing on Guitar,I Find D Ionian(1# 2 3 4# 5 6 7 on C)also works on CMaj7,at least it works on guitar。

    • @sanjayalama6038
      @sanjayalama6038 5 лет назад +1

      子青 Yes, I also agree with you.
      The whole step of B should be C#.

    • @RolandoCruz
      @RolandoCruz 5 лет назад

      You're rigth. It si better to think in triads rather than 7th chords.

    • @DICACIO1
      @DICACIO1 5 лет назад +1

      He didn't say that LOL He said to apply the "whole step method" to only the 1-3 and 5th intervals/notes of the 7th chords, not the 7th's. There was no mention of CHROMATIC movement using "c sharp" notes on Major 7th chords.. . It would sound horrific using a flat 9th on major 7 chords because major chords have to sound HAPPY not sad! However, jazz musicians religiously use flat 9th's on dominant 7th chords to alter them with flat 13 or raised 11th's or just a basic flat 9th "three-note voicings" using TRIADS 😂😂😂😂
      Using the "Triad method" is way FASTER & EASIER to teach music students "jazz chords" or "black music chords" (such as: Gospel, R&B, Soul, Funk, Blues) instead of this whole step approach 😇🖤😈🎹🎵🎵🎵🎵

    • @ziqinggu6085
      @ziqinggu6085 5 лет назад

      @@DICACIO1 you are right

  • @LIONFIGHTMUSIC
    @LIONFIGHTMUSIC 13 дней назад

    This is incredible! Thanks so much!

  • @VanishedMediaOfficial
    @VanishedMediaOfficial 6 лет назад

    This cleared so much for me, I've been wanting to play jazz guitar for sometime and I'm more confident to approach it. Thank you !!!

  • @PIANOSTYLE100
    @PIANOSTYLE100 5 лет назад +3

    Just some thoughts and hacks. When I am playing C blues I have a tendency to go down a minor third to a blues and play it over the C7 And G7. This is what Lestor Flatt did when he played the the G run G A Bb B D E. Put the E on the front note and you can see the E blues scale over the G. E G Bb B D E..So if I'm playing G blues..I'll often switch to the E blues.On the four chord of C blues progression which is F7 dominant, I often will play C blues scale.From the F7 the C blues scale C D Eb G Bb is 5 13(6) 9(2) 11(4). There is a lot of flavor on the F chord.

  • @jonaseason3981
    @jonaseason3981 5 лет назад +4

    I play guitar, but this video helped me more than any guitar video I’ve ever seen. Definite subscribe.

    • @jazz_c_a_t
      @jazz_c_a_t 5 лет назад

      same tbh, can confirm it^

  • @user-qh1rq9qg4m
    @user-qh1rq9qg4m 11 месяцев назад

    Could never remember these sophisticated-sounding scales before bumping into your ‘whole step technique’. Finally had a useful reference whenever I get lost on the keyboard. Can’t thank you enough for the best explained video on this subject, Julian!

  • @seanonel
    @seanonel Год назад +1

    I must have watched this very early on learning to play as I only gave a like. Coming back after 6000+ hours of practice since April 2020, this makes SO much sense! Thank you. I have a dedicated folder just for your tutorials. You really are one of the best. I've come to realise that most internet music teachers don't tell the full truth unless you get behind their paywall. You give sound advice that makes a difference instantly.
    Very much appreciated.
    Thank you Julian. ❤

  • @nikolaynekhaienko9703
    @nikolaynekhaienko9703 5 лет назад +4

    Thanks, Julian. It's so cool method you've shared! I really like it.
    During the watching, I came up with an idea, that I can get the same result (get a scale) by adding the same triad like in initial chord from the 2nd note ( f.e. if you have C7 initial chord, then add D triad; once you have Fm7 then add Gm triad; if dim - then dim, etc. I think you know it, but maybe it will be helpful for someone :)

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 2 года назад

      I believe you are correct. I suspect that this would show up om a fetted instrument like a guitar.

  • @Garock2
    @Garock2 6 лет назад +3

    This lesson opened my mind and changed my life! Thank you a lot

  • @lalitharamji
    @lalitharamji 5 лет назад +1

    What a super lesson!! Thank you, Mr. Bradley, for your expertise, time and generosity.

  • @teodorojaranilla5008
    @teodorojaranilla5008 Месяц назад

    THANK YOU! from a classical pianist that always greatly admired jazz and its musicians ..you are,, frankly ...artists and geniuses!! more THAN Many classical pianists are...!!

  • @kurosenpai
    @kurosenpai 4 года назад +7

    when i was 13y old i was learning the piano with this teacher and it was so confusing and suddenly realizeed that you just add whole step on any notes in any chords, just like in this video

    • @eduardomeza7279
      @eduardomeza7279 3 года назад

      Ik I was seriously just realizing that there's much different ways of explaining the same thing. And some people just have a much easier time understanding certain ways than others. Like more technical learner's probably understand intervals and scales easier where as a visual/hands on experimental learner like myself has a much easier time visualizing it as chordal tones and just adding a step to each

  • @HGQjazz
    @HGQjazz 6 лет назад +80

    The only issue I have is your theory does't take into account the context of the chord. Certainly you'd want to play a different scale over Cmaj7 if it's I or IV. Or maybe it's functioning in some modal minor context? These things should also be considered, right?

    • @banchyy09
      @banchyy09 6 лет назад +6

      yeah I thought the same...not to mention the lydian dominant scale is generally only used over non-resolving dominants from what I understand....so can't play it over a V7, where you are most likely to see a dominant.

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 6 лет назад +3

      Luke Banchy I usually play a mixolydian over a five .. but it totally depends on the chord and the melody.. I'm still learning myself...there is so much to learn.

    • @HGQjazz
      @HGQjazz 6 лет назад +15

      An easier approach would be to play the notes of the key signature unless a chord tone of the chord tells you to play something else. As a jumping off point, I mean.

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 6 лет назад

      That is a good point.. If you are reading autumn leaves which is a fantastic masterpiece of the modes etc.thats a good example. Both ways are valid. Of course you would usually go to a straight mixolydianI just did a video on Georgia on my mind. In the middle of the video ( i didnt cut it out, as I think its a good learning processs.. I said it probably just calls for the a7b9 here and I had put an a7 ). So not wanting to get it wrong but ; I just went to the net and found out it did call for the a7 in the verse. I got my keyboard out and made sure I had not made any other mistakes..as I was playing it I found the chorus that had an a7b9 in it.. My ear was hearing it, but I was mixing the two.. I guess it is also a taste thing. Jazz is not my forte.

    • @nigelhaywood9753
      @nigelhaywood9753 6 лет назад +7

      I tried it on 'All The Things You Are'. Unless I've missed something, it doesn't seem to work at all. It doesn't make a whole lot of sense to play F dorian over the first F minor chord when you're immediately going to Bb minor after that, especially considering the fact that the aeolian sixth degree of the scale (Db in F minor) is the note in the melody over the following Bb minor. It's all kinds of wrong. This strikes me as a bit of a quack, cure-all remedy that in no way can replace traditional harmonic analysis for choosing scales, or even just playing by ear.

  • @wolkowy1
    @wolkowy1 5 лет назад

    In my youth I was a classic piano-player (also Baroque on harpsichord) with a secret passion for jazz. During the years I've lost touch with music-playing but now, I would like to revive my connection. I started with J. S. Bach which is good for the memory (not so good lately...) and searched my way to fulfill this old secret passion of mine. I found (by chance) the answer here in your excellent jazz tutorial. Thank so much for your fine uploads.

  • @ellievo305
    @ellievo305 3 года назад +1

    There are no shortcuts in learning jazz. Years of listening, transcribing, and building a vocabulary for jazz language is the only way to get to the level that you desire.

  • @PIANOSTYLE100
    @PIANOSTYLE100 6 лет назад +3

    You mentioned the alternate scale and. The alternate scale I think is really the most telling. chord in jazz,. This is written for the new.This takes five minutes to peruse. I use capital letters when I am trying to emphasize something. I try to make this as clear as possible.. only by reading carefully can most newer learners understand this ..there are almost no steps skipped. One example how it works with the ALTERED scale after giving some good music habits that help. I make notes in pencil on a copy of a piece.. Make sure you own the music.. By making notes.. not copious.. you can remember what you learn or observe, and not waste time relearning something you knew already.. Here is an example regarding the altered scale.
    say I'm introduced to something new like the altered scale. (.I Learn Every New Thing in C. That seems stupid, but it will open up music theory to many.. Reading carefully one can clearly see what is a sharp or a flat or the intervals in all scales..
    So notes I handwrite.. (handwriting takes effort and reinforces learning.). In the following be aware there is no musical subscript for the letter b on the standard keyboard.. I will use b for flat.
    Here is the major c scale.
    c. d. e. f. g. a. b. first observation is flat every thing. and go in a descending order
    c bb ab. gb f b. eb db c
    NOW see how easy it is to do this..
    Just say the letter of the scale and say flat and it it in descending order.
    It's important to do this in c, but this will be a little strange in certain chords.. The beginner should note that the f b is an unusual way to say e.. (((Please note that I had to space f b because spellchech has no words that pick up flat..and it wants to put f. g as that is part of the alphabet.)))
    Now reinforce the ease of this ..
    Right hand .. pinky on right hand... will abbreviate that as r h.
    c bb ab gb e .. just follow through with other fingers .. thumb will be on e.
    Now this good .. I run my fingers back and fourth and notice that this is the whole tone scale down to e. THIS is Important.. to have recognized this you would have to have known the whole tone scale...For the new..see how all these seemingly unrelated things make other patterns and relationships easier to learn .
    So in ascending order .. the altered scale... which quite frankly one of MAIN scales to know.. IF you know this scale.. you very well could be a much better player. This comment is largely written to beginners..
    In descending order it is : c. bb ab gb fb eb db.c.
    Not dragging this out .. ...but say c b a g f e d c
    Now put a flat after everything except the tonic c.
    In as ending order. c db eb f.b gb ab bb c.
    That is c db d# e gb g# bb c
    Now to the new, this will be gibberish. it would have been gibberish to me . This is REALLY. 1 b2 #2 3 b5 # 5 7 8.
    Now I wrote this in a weird way but but you may be understanding why. In c. is visually written as
    C db eb e gb ab bb c .. Please notice that this is notated above but in an enharmonic manner.
    WHAT is the big deal viewers may ask.. Well here it is written out in extensions.
    1 b9 #9 3 ( b5 or #11) b13
    b7. Notice that there is no 2 4 5 6 or 7 .. that will something that I would make a note of.a s a beginner... remember we all have to start somewhere. The most advanced players are always searching for more Knowledge So now let's review This scale has no
    fifth.. Modern jazz chords focus only on the root b3 and b7 ..
    But the extensions are what gives jazz it's flavor.. Here are is something thing to try.. in the left hand root c bass.. now in the the middle of the piano play right hand bb e a..this is why this scale is so useful. All notes left and right hand make a c 13.. ( c. bb e a). Notice that the a is is the sixth and a is also 13th extension.. We don't have a thirteenth but it s surrounded by a b13 and sharp13..But you say we don't have that 13 in the scale. You are right there is no thirteen.. but there is a flat thirteen which is Ab .. so just move that to a so that is the thirty of c.. notice that this first chord I gave you has a natural 13 or six.. Now I would also notice that the the flat 7 is just a semitone down from a flat seven . Wow I am sharing the process of learning this stuff it seems like I'm going in tangential moves here.. That is the way most people learn I think. So while I'm here.. I'll get back to the lick.. you can read ahead and play the fantastic. chord lick I was taught by my piano jazz, teacher years ago. if you know the b7 just go down one semi tone and voila the magical 13th. Now move the left hand to f... the right hand chord is a dominant f#9. It is in numbers 3 b7 and #9 of the root . Everything in scales or chords. has to have a reference or tonic. In this last part I put the left hand and right hand.
    C. Bb E. A. This is a C 13
    F A. Eb G#
    If you are a beginner you can put this into watch later and go ba k to this video. This is for late beginners.

  • @Moneymade77
    @Moneymade77 6 лет назад +96

    The guitar may be my main Intsrument, but this is still overly helpful.
    Thank you kind Sir ;)

    • @maniacalpeppers5742
      @maniacalpeppers5742 6 лет назад +8

      Moneymade77 the piano is an instrument of all the instruments :)

    • @jovanj2717
      @jovanj2717 5 лет назад +5

      Guitar and Piano are very helpful for teaching each other. They are both “chordal” instruments, where we can play these big lush chords, and also both instruments are very pattern based

    • @abelton20
      @abelton20 5 лет назад +5

      I played along on my guitar and it made things very clear

    • @cpt.battlecock5264
      @cpt.battlecock5264 5 лет назад

      I go to singlas music to learn my piano theory.

    • @eagleagent2414
      @eagleagent2414 5 лет назад

      Moneymade

  • @blacklonggadogg
    @blacklonggadogg 5 лет назад

    Awesome approach, Bro.
    Prophetic, even..
    Thanks.

  • @paulosborn1507
    @paulosborn1507 5 лет назад +1

    That was so incredibly informative. Music is beautiful. Thank you for everything.. very inspiring

  • @rusrad74
    @rusrad74 5 лет назад +8

    Awesome dude I wish this video was around 20 years ago for me lol

  • @zsandman82
    @zsandman82 6 лет назад +48

    Hi Julian: This is really an excellent video and gives lots to practice on. You indicated that you use this method perhaps 70% of the time. Can you, at some point, share what you do, and your thoughts the other 30% of the time? Perhaps a separate video or two delving into your detailed thought processes as you improvise from chord to chord. Say, for example, you know a piece extremely well and you feel like stretching your improv wings. What thoughts flash through your mind (they must really flash when doing this on the fly) and alternatives do you consider as variations to this 70% (already great) approach?

    • @oliverwarren1074
      @oliverwarren1074 6 лет назад +2

      Very good question, I'd like to see the answer to this one!

    • @jakubpapik5950
      @jakubpapik5950 6 лет назад +2

      I second this!

    • @leonardovmusic
      @leonardovmusic 6 лет назад +4

      David Maher The spirit of jazz is improvisation, there is a chance in that other 30% he probably uses what sounds good to him and he decides to not plan everything and just tell a story putting a group of notes together. Would be great to read/view to his answer. Great video.

    • @newtonlkh
      @newtonlkh 6 лет назад

      The remaining 30% will be the list at the back of the book as he stated at the start of the video, i guess. Having a easy shortcut for 70% to kickstart playing is fantasic enough already.

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +29

      Hey David, great question.
      So sometimes I'll play the blues scale over minor 7 chords. So over Cm7 I'll sometimes play C Eb F Gb G Bb (which isn't derived from this chordal tone + whole-step method).
      And other times, I'll change things up over V7 chords - since V7 chords are the best place usually to use exotic scales. So over C7 I'll often play the altered scale (C Db Eb E Gb Ab Bb)...
      ...and occasionally I'll play the diminished scale, or whole-tone scale.
      A good tutorial to see me talk about these other scales is my 'Exotic V7 scales' video here:
      ruclips.net/video/K9JGgjQG-Uw/видео.html
      Does this make sense? Let me know if this helps.

  • @joelpierson2628
    @joelpierson2628 6 лет назад

    Spent a few days thinking about this technique and working it out on paper. It led me to revisiting Scale mode theory which I finally have down good enough to explain it to others in case anyone ever ask! Found a Funk backing track in E minor over at Coffee Break Grooves and played over it by ear writing down what sounded good to me. Took the E minor chord and applied the whole note above the triad notes and it fit what my ear told me was correct. Turned out E Dorian was the name of what my ear told me was right. Really a fun practical exercise with long term benefits. Playing by ear is a good thing but, combining it with the ability to put names on what to play is a higher level of musicianship. Practically speaking, when I get good at this, I won't have to fumble around for 4 to 8 bars to find the groove. This was a crossroad between theory and my ear.

  • @AnnaFrajtova
    @AnnaFrajtova 4 года назад +1

    Great tutorial, Julian, thank you! So well explained. I think I’m going to purchase your online course! 😊

  • @cafiristanemperor
    @cafiristanemperor 4 года назад +4

    Nice video, sir, thanks a lot! Just one question:
    Is there some similar technique to apply to diminished and augmented chords as well? It would be helpful!

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 2 года назад +1

      Im going through the comments. Saw this comment of 3 years ago. You may know all of this I think that a similar pattern will work. Here is possibly an answer. I am doing this on the fly. Ok, the video suggests going up a whole step. So I would try a Whole Half Diminished scale and see of it fits.
      C D Eb F Gb Ab A B C. That is basically a combination of 2 full diminished seven chords.
      C Eb Gb A and D F Ab B
      C D Eb F Gb Ab A B C
      The second row is HW dim scale.
      Also..each one on the top is a minor 3rd ..or 1 and half steps up. On a guitar this would be 4 frets.

  • @KenDWebber
    @KenDWebber 6 лет назад +13

    I play music mostly by ear on bass or guitar. I began picking up keyboard and music theory about two years ago. Music theory to me seems very much like math and math puzzles and lots of memorization of formulas. I now find myself creating music much like a person solves a rubik's cube. You learn patterns to start the puzzle, different patterns automatically click in, and then there are final patterns that solve the cube. But when it comes time to lay guitar and bass tracks all the patterning goes out the window because it gets in my way. It's like mind clutter to my guitar ears. I usually end up laying tracks by ear or chopping up the audio wave and composing note by note and sound by sound. My question for you and all the music theory people reading this is, Do you ever just sit there and play or record without thinking solely by what you feel or is everything you compose intricately worked out in advance according to theory/rules and with no chaos?

    • @skyzenskyluke5880
      @skyzenskyluke5880 6 лет назад +2

      Ken D. Webber hmmm...it's true that music theory can be sometimes confusing like math...but on the other side if you want to be a composer you have learn music because it's still important :
      -It's allow you to avoid mistakes on your composition
      -it's help you to communicate easily with other guitar player
      - and it's help everyone to study musical piece that they like and playing them ect....

    • @KenDWebber
      @KenDWebber 6 лет назад +5

      I like your second point. Your first point is where I'm getting at. You call it a mistake and yet those "mistakes" are frequently what catches people's attention and sells albums from Slayer to Nirvana. They make the music interesting because they take the ear where educated jazz musicians would never go and the music ends up sounding fresh. There are no mistakes in music. There are only journey's and paths that you either take or do not take.

    • @skyzenskyluke5880
      @skyzenskyluke5880 6 лет назад +1

      Ken D. Webber Yeaaah i think you're right about it sometimes it doesn't hurt to get out of the box obviously and experimenting new stuff that nobody has ever tried...i'm okay with that
      but i m just saying it's better to know the rules first and then break them.

    • @shaneburgess2607
      @shaneburgess2607 6 лет назад +5

      It's about being able to visualize the notes and their sounds and understanding their relationship to eachother at the same (knowing how all the notes you're playing relate to the underlying chord). With practice it becomes second nature and you can freely express yourself. Its completely visual, thats why you have immediate access to any sound you want to create. Dont waste your time with filling out theory books because if you cant visualize it on the neck its useless. It's a super long process that definitely feels like brain clutter at first, but as you start to understand it, you start to be able to see the music on the neck the way that youve always wanted it to come out in your head. you'll find you can even play guitar in your head while still being aware of every note you're hearing and where it is on the neck

    • @estherandexiles
      @estherandexiles 5 лет назад

      The best way I can describe it is that when one continues to play and listen, the rules become internalized, and many of the same patterns emerge naturally as you play. Sometimes you don’t have to think about it at all.

  • @teodorojaranilla5008
    @teodorojaranilla5008 Месяц назад

    i wish you travelled to spend months to the philippines to TEACH!! so many would go CRAZY wanting to BECOME jazz musicians!! and discover its great , rich. beauty...from a wonderful musician like you who makes it all so clear and reachable..wow!! ..it makes me want to go back to my piano here ...and study like a total beginner again...for the NEW wonderful world of JAZZ!! that i only appreciated as a mere listener but never confident enough even with my classical musiic knowledge ..- to try!! and i wish MORE people who love music could learn it the way you teach it.!

  • @minderDOTorg
    @minderDOTorg 5 лет назад

    Played guitar for 30 years and my goodness what an utterly superb yet simple tip this is. Thank you kind sir for giving this to break out of major and minor pentatonic. P.S. Lydian dominant often thrown into bluesy guitar solos too!

  • @dudechill6057
    @dudechill6057 4 года назад +17

    8:59 I was actually taking screenshots the whole time XD

    • @augustin2487
      @augustin2487 4 года назад +2

      You're not alone man:)

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 2 года назад

      I have been using screenmaster for screen shots. I

  • @robertbarkho4098
    @robertbarkho4098 6 лет назад +4

    Brilliant.
    Question, what do you use the other 30% of the times?

    • @Willyliemfams
      @Willyliemfams 6 лет назад

      Robert Barkho improvise

    • @robertbarkho4098
      @robertbarkho4098 5 лет назад

      Willy Wijaya
      improvise where?
      adding random or what's left over notes?

  • @nikolopapini2410
    @nikolopapini2410 5 лет назад +1

    We've got many good jazz pianists and very few of them able to teach...Thanks for this video

  • @adamdadamusic
    @adamdadamusic 5 лет назад +1

    I love harmony, and I have a deep understanding of it. Let me clarify for anyone watching this video and implementing it's suggestions in the real world, this will ruin your music.
    When you play IN a key, (as 99% of the music you will ever hear is) you play notes that are contained within a scale, the first note of which is called the key you are 'in'. In the key of C major you would use a C major scale. In the C major scales there are these notes: C D E F G A B. If I build 3 note chords (triads) or 4 note chords (seventh chords) using only these notes (in a 'play one skip one' fashion) I get a pattern of major and minor (and diminished) chords.
    The pattern I get from triads is Major, Minor, Minor, Major, Major Minor, Diminished.
    The pattern I get from seventh chords is Maj7, Min7, Min7, Maj7, Dominant7, Min 7, Half diminished. (note there is more detail to the chord description {V's major becomes "dominant" because thats the name for a major chord with a b7th} {Diminished becomes "Half Diminished" because you get a bb7th in a fully diminished chord, and only a b7th in a half diminished chord} because 4 notes is more 'descriptive' than 3).
    The pattern I get from a 5 note (ninth) chord is Maj79, Min79, Min7b9, Maj79, Dominant79, Min79, Half dim b9 (even more detail! but notice that still there are two Maj79 chords and two Min79 chords that still have the same extensions) - lets continue.
    The pattern I get from a 6 note (eleventh) chord is Maj7911, Min7911, Min7b911, Maj79#11, Dominant7911, Min7911, Half dim b911 (note I only have one ambiguity now, chord II and chord VI of the series are still both labelled the same, they still have the same extensions).
    The pattern I get from a 7 note (thirteenth) chord is Maj791113, Min 791113, Min7b9 1113, Maj79#1113, Dominant791113, Min7911b13, Half dim b911b13.
    These are scales (or chords) of their own, even though they use the notes from the C major scale, they have their own unique sound, some are often employed in Jazz music, they are called MODES. Each of those 7 note chords has a name.
    1 - Ionian
    2 - Dorian
    3 - Phyrgian
    4 - Lydian
    5 - Mixolydian
    6 - Aeolian
    7 - Locrian
    Back to our C major scale chords briefly: Cmaj, Dmin, Emin, Fmaj, Gmaj, Amin, Bdim
    Now, because we often very quickly develop a strong sense of the key we are in when listening to music, it can be very obvious and 'wrong' sounding, if someone matches the wrong mode with the wrong chord. For example if I played the chord Cmaj but played the 4th mode (C Lydian ) over it, it would sound strange in the context of the key - this is because of the series I wrote earlier showing that our ears would 'expect' to hear the notes C D E F G A B (Ionian) rather than C D E F# G A B.
    When I listen to music I can immediately pick out 'where' I am in the key/scale, the way that my brain has learnt to do this is by singing a 'scale' starting on the first strong note I hear in the piece and then working up or down from there to find a pool of 7 notes that work. At that point I don't know where the 'beginning' of my scale is, but I use the relationships between the notes (tones or semitones) or I find where feels like 'home' and then test it out by singing a nursery rhyme or some such famous piece of music that I know starts on the 1st note of a major scale (e.g. Twinkle Twinkle little star) to check if I've got it right.
    I have no need to do this consciously anymore because my ears have becomes so sensitive to key/scale relationships that as soon as I hear a piece of music (within I would say 2 - 3 seconds for 90% of the music I hear) I know which chord I'm on in the scale and then a couple of seconds after that I have worked out the note the melody is on.
    I don't imagine notes anymore, rather I hear the relationships between the notes (regardless of whether they are C D or E etc.).
    I DO NOT have perfect pitch and this is a skill I have developed from being a self taught multi instrumentalist and working out song since I was 5yrs old by myself. I've never properly learnt to sight read, which is a skill I'm working hard on now! I graduated with a BA in Jazz and I play piano, guitar, bass and drums and produce music and teach for a living.
    If there is a demand for it, I will start posting youtube tutorials on aural skills and understanding the foundations of harmony.
    All the best, Adam

  • @lordzeus2652
    @lordzeus2652 6 лет назад +50

    Cool concept. But, I have to disagree with you about the Lydian-Dominant scale not being found in other genres of music than jazz. It was used a lot by composers like Debussy from the Impressionist era. It was called the "Acoustic scale" or "Overtone scale".

    • @skyzenskyluke5880
      @skyzenskyluke5880 6 лет назад +1

      Lord Zeus Yes, as well as in Modern Orchestra, music score (Jurassic park, E.T....

    • @javikero
      @javikero 6 лет назад

      In fact it's called Bartok scale too..

    • @darshangowda9347
      @darshangowda9347 5 лет назад +1

      I disagree with that as well. Raag Yaman in Indian Classical music uses Lydian scale

    • @GTAMONTHLYS
      @GTAMONTHLYS 5 лет назад +1

      Lord Zeus if you don’t mind me asking what compositions were they by debussy??

    • @coliv2
      @coliv2 5 лет назад +2

      Jazz players have this notion that things were invented in jazz, when in fact pretty much anything played in jazz was invented first in classical music...

  • @jimmytheslacker
    @jimmytheslacker 5 лет назад +7

    388 people picking up on a Wu Tang reference in a jazz piano tutorial just realized that they're now middle aged. 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂

    • @smitha5692
      @smitha5692 4 года назад

      i knew that wu tang reference and im 7

  • @jesseimpersonal
    @jesseimpersonal 2 года назад

    I've learned a lot from Julian Bradley in a short time via his online school. Great teacher, very clear, great resource for anyone wanting to learn jazz piano.

  • @EvaluateAssimilate
    @EvaluateAssimilate 5 лет назад

    Taking these examples and applying it to the guitar has opened up a world I can now freely step in and out of. Very much appreciate the lesson. Thanks for your time!!

  • @KRISNAMUSIK
    @KRISNAMUSIK 6 лет назад +21

    oh man youare the best awesome

  • @Glow0110
    @Glow0110 5 лет назад +3

    I want to get better at piano but damn, how do you remember all of this on the spot and apply it so smoothly shiiiiit haha

    • @PIANOSTYLE100
      @PIANOSTYLE100 2 года назад

      Been playing 🎸 and 🎹 over 50 years. My memory is not fantastic.
      Y its not unusual to play thousands of.notes when improvising.. I do that jam tracks. Part of that is playing by ear..If you have played the blues of thousands of times in a lifetime..you just have down in your memory. As time goes on you learn a few scales..Learn how pick and grin while playing a little bluegrass. Then you read some books..I've got a fair amount of those.

  • @DesoKawa
    @DesoKawa 5 лет назад

    That's fantastic!
    Thank You for sharing Your knowledge with us !

  • @CVerse
    @CVerse 5 лет назад

    I've been playing violin in my spanish church choir for over 5 years now and I've been looking to "level up" my style of playing and soloing. I feel like learning Jazz techniques (yes I know, kind of barbaric for a classical violin player haha) is the right step, and this tutorial along with Adam Neely's video on Cantus Firmus really is helping me out!

  • @ArtyoneT
    @ArtyoneT 6 лет назад +7

    @3:00 Wu Tang! Even though you may have been referring to The Charmels. Idk, you tell me lol.

  • @TelowVaughnMusic
    @TelowVaughnMusic 6 лет назад +42

    Was that wu tang? Lol

    • @jazztutorial
      @jazztutorial  6 лет назад +21

      Absolutely - as a teenager I transcribed just about every Wu Tang piano riff

    • @bagofdragonite149
      @bagofdragonite149 6 лет назад +5

      Arturo Senni Hahaha, buddy knows The Charmels'. Is this guy a prestigious Italian professor or what?

    • @ConicalRamirez
      @ConicalRamirez 6 лет назад +3

      Arturo Senni What a horrible man you are

    • @grnd_ctrl8387
      @grnd_ctrl8387 6 лет назад +1

      Arturo Senni I mean, Wu Tang is for children.

    • @isaiahdoyle8819
      @isaiahdoyle8819 6 лет назад +4

      Arturo Senni seemingly grown men calling younger generations ‘retards’.. adults these days..

  • @olddoggeleventy2718
    @olddoggeleventy2718 5 лет назад

    You, sir, have opened up a whole new world of understanding! Thank you so very much! I will probably still struggle a bit, but you've put in a way that's easier for me to understand!

  • @garysnowdon1918
    @garysnowdon1918 5 лет назад +2

    Simply amazing I learnt so much for my guitar and saxophone playing. Thank you

  • @heast9550
    @heast9550 4 года назад +5

    8:59 i heard a lofi music with the same lead :v

    • @imanoljesusdelpozo4907
      @imanoljesusdelpozo4907 4 года назад

      That may be because almost all lofi hip-hop music uses samples and melodies from jazz records

    • @spikespiegel6587
      @spikespiegel6587 4 года назад

      Misty is the titlee

  • @pedal64
    @pedal64 6 лет назад +4

    Wu tang

  • @GazaKribow
    @GazaKribow 6 лет назад

    i've been confused for years, then suddenly i clicked the link to this video. AND MY SUFFERING HAS GONE FOREVER!!! Thank you so much. this is the best video i've watch on youtube in my whole life so far :'))
    best regard, church pianist from Indonesia...

  • @utkarshhonstage
    @utkarshhonstage 3 года назад

    The way you explained, it was like very old method of explaining indian classical music scales. Incredible

  • @omrixeren
    @omrixeren 5 лет назад +12

    This is not always going to work frankly. Scales work in relation to a whole key, not one chord. Cannot play a dorian scale if that Bbm is the 3rd chord in a Gb scale, or the 6th in a Db scale. Good tip, but as you said in the beginning, you just showed us what to do, didn't actually explain it. Also you said you use these chords most of the time, which means there is still that time which you play different things, that we still don't know. In my experience, you just need to understand where the chord is in relation to the current key of the song. Meaning when you hear a minor 7 chord, you need to understand which minor 7 chord it is, is it the 2nd, 3rd, or 6th chord of the scale? it's all 1 major scale, starting from different points of the scale. You gotta listen to that scale, and work by that - the key\current key ( it can change a few times during a song) of the song.

    • @mariostoumbas6531
      @mariostoumbas6531 5 лет назад

      Omri Keren that is correct! I am a university professor of jazz harmony and I was just about to comment on this as well but your comment covers me.

    • @sarsbrooks5398
      @sarsbrooks5398 5 лет назад

      ...ALSO IF YOU'RE PLAYING BY YOURSELF - LIKE HE IS - HIS METHODS WORK - FOR WHAT HE WANTS TO PLAY... - HOWEVER - WHEN PLAYING WITH OTHERS - THIS METHOD MAY NOT WORK... - THIS IS WHY IT'S VERY IMPORTANT TO LISTEN TO - WHAT EVERYONE ELSE IS PLAYING - AND - EITHER AGREE TO DISAGREE -BC - THIS METHOD GOES AGAINST THE CHORD RELATION TO A SPECIFIC KEY - AND - STICK WITH TRADITION... - OR GO OUT ON A LIMB - AND - EVERYONE PLAYS - THE WRONG CHORDS - TO BRING A DIFFERENT COLOR TO THE CHORDS/SONGS... - AND - NOT PLAY THE SAME TRADITIONAL CHORDS/THING - ALL OF THE TIME - AND - APPEALING TO THE TRUE MUSICIANS WHO ARE LISTENING TO THE MUSIC - VIA CHORD STRUCTURE/VARIATIONS - TO ADD MORE FLAVOR TO A SONG... - CAN BE QUIET REFRESHING - SO HAVE ALL OF THE FUN - WITH MUSIC YOU CAN - IT'S WHAT GIVES US OUR OWN SOUND - AND - WHAT MAKES US PLAY IN THE FIRST PLACE... - SO EVERYONE - KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK - AND - NEVER FORGET WHY WE ARE MUSICIANS IN THE FIRST PLACE... - TO HAVE FUN - EXPRESSING OURSELVES MUSICALLY... - GOOD LUCK - AND - GOD BLESS...

    • @jingyitay6179
      @jingyitay6179 5 лет назад

      @@mariostoumbas6531 thanks for the idea. I was looking for comments like this. because I was confused how I should be listening if say I have dominant chords, should I still think in the major scale that the dominant chord is in, making the dominant chord the 5th of the scale or should I think of the dominant as its own scale (1st), like how the minor scale is the 1st

  • @BenK12345
    @BenK12345 5 лет назад +5

    nice :) though I still hate the names of the modes.. with a passion..
    it sounds so pretentious and purposely obfuscating to say "C Lydian" instead of "G Maj with root C".. any beginner can play G Maj and start/end on C, but most beginners have no idea what Lydian is. those stupid mode names need to be taken behind the barn and never return.

    • @ernstlieber4340
      @ernstlieber4340 5 лет назад

      This is most likely the most ignorant post about music I have ever read. Get some good reading or youtube about scales (modes) and you will forget what you just thought and wrote.

  • @christophermamian7168
    @christophermamian7168 5 лет назад +1

    Has it always been so simple??? Why am I only learning this after so many years of confusion!
    Thank you mate! Smashing that subscribe button!!

  • @silviadecet5674
    @silviadecet5674 5 лет назад

    WOW, that is brilliant, so simple and yet so sophisticated!!! Thanks so much from a self-taught Italian jazz lover.

  • @shoneyis
    @shoneyis 5 лет назад +4

    you kinda cheated with the Major chord - according to this system you should add one step from B and get Csharp

    • @mysticsailor9
      @mysticsailor9 5 лет назад

      Except he said a full note above the 1,3,5...

    • @shoneyis
      @shoneyis 5 лет назад

      @@mysticsailor9 did he? I remember him showing with the dominant to go a step over B flat to C. No?

    • @DidierMartini
      @DidierMartini 4 года назад

      @@mysticsailor9 He's right, check the subtitle, he's telling "Whole step" not full note !

    • @mysticsailor9
      @mysticsailor9 4 года назад

      @@DidierMartini sigh.. a "whole step" is a full note equals two semitones equals exactly what he said and did..

    • @DidierMartini
      @DidierMartini 4 года назад

      @@mysticsailor9 I'll explain better... The title of this video is "end of your confusion" so.... (Check my youtube channel if you think i don't know what is a Whole Step / semitones ;) ). he tells "add a whole step to root third and fifth" at 1:20, yes he tells it, so where is the problem ? one small line on a 10mn tutorial video where he shows to understand the trick the 4 notes of a 7th major chord, not 3 !
      you have on the screen "whole step technique" with C E G and B written under it ! It would be ok if he'll only tell and play "C -> D , E->F# , G->A, but he's playing the B and a C just after without explanation.
      (I was a piano/Jazz teacher).
      it can confuse any beginner who would apply the so called "whole step" technique. Put yourself in the seat of a complete beginner who just learned his scales and know what is a semitone and a whole step but nothing else. Telling it's only working on the Root, Third and Fifth must be written everywhere and not playing a B followed by a C on the video while explaining it, unless he explains why he played a semitone on the last note instead of a whole step !

  • @bausin
    @bausin 5 лет назад +4

    I don't think I can adequately express what a counter productive video I think this is. It takes you on a useless tangent if you're trying to understand jazz harmony and which jazz scales are used in jazz. Just learn the modes of the major scale; e.g. a ii-V-I is played using the Dorian, Mixolydian, and Ionian modes.

    • @bausin
      @bausin 5 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/pQlQghQKzmQ/видео.html

    • @jimohara4822
      @jimohara4822 5 лет назад

      Great for the casual player like me though. Been learning jazz for a few months now, can't read a shred of music but can quite fluently play chords. Haven't really delved into scales or improvising so this is a nice start for me.

    • @ThePoisonBiscuit
      @ThePoisonBiscuit 5 лет назад

      Why name 3 different scales since they all contain the same notes? Why not just have one name to describe the one thing? Not trying to be a smart ass, genuinely curious.

  • @MrDucehands
    @MrDucehands 6 лет назад

    Thank you for this video. I'm a bass player who struggled with soloing and this is super helpful

  • @marktwain368
    @marktwain368 5 лет назад

    This is very helpful...thanks my friend!

  • @brunomaiamusic
    @brunomaiamusic 5 лет назад +1

    Very captive and super clear.
    Allow me add a little comment,
    "dominant lydian" or "mixolydean #11" is also widely used in Brazilian folk music from the North East of Brazil.

  • @babsycello
    @babsycello 5 лет назад

    Thank you, I learned classical music and jazz always puzzled me. I want to train my ear to understand it better, your videos are just perfect!

  • @MrNasch82
    @MrNasch82 5 лет назад +1

    Very helpful! Thank you so much for this knowledge. I really preciate it. Keep up the amazing work you are doing. Greetings from germany.

  • @alexsiuwh
    @alexsiuwh Год назад

    This is the 1st time I getting to appreciate Modes like Dorian and Lydian.. Thanks for sharing the great practical tips!