🔴SO WHAT: modal jazz standard guitar lesson❗️

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • 🎵SO WHAT is a great modal jazz standard to learn. This Miles Davis tune is a great standard to explore your ideas as it has a very simple structure. In this lesson I break it down for you as follows:
    🔴 The form and why it's considered to be a modal piece
    🔴 The 4th chord shapes you need to get the modal sound
    🔴 How to start soloing with the Dorian scale
    All of today's PDFs can be downloaded for free over at my website: www.jazzguitar...
    👍Enjoy the lesson and see you every Wednesday and Saturday for jazz guitar lessons
    🔔SUBSCRIBE: For jazz guitar lessons every Wednesday and Saturday. Don't forget to hit the notification bell to be informed of my next video. / @jazzguitarwithandy
    ❤️️COMMENT: If you've gained value out of today's lesson or have any questions or comments then please leave them below and I will get back to you.
    ▶ WATCH NEXT HOW JAZZ TRAVELS: studio.youtube...
    ▶ MODAL BACKING TRACK PLAYLIST: • C parallel modal backi...
    EQUIPMENT USED TO MAKE THIS VIDEO:
    Fender Ultra Telecaster cobra blue
    Fender Deluxe Reverb
    Electro Harmonix Freeze pedal
    #jazzguitar #jazzguitarlesson #sowhat

Комментарии • 76

  • @jazzguitarwithandy
    @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад +4

    This standard is such a great song to work on developing ideas/phrases over. Don't forget to get the resources at my website:://www.jazzguitarwithandy.com/blog/so-what-lesson-1-amp-2-resources

  • @janekivanski6759
    @janekivanski6759 2 месяца назад +1

    There is so much musical magic here to keep me occupied for weeks! Many thanks

  • @joevee5619
    @joevee5619 16 дней назад +1

    Andy...I like your approach of starting with simple triad and adding the colors one by one and singing the sound...You get to visualize where the notes are located relative to each other on the fret board.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  4 дня назад

      Yes - it's a nice way to get used to the sound and really focus on developing ideas that way.

  • @VixCrush
    @VixCrush 2 года назад +1

    Good ideas. I met Miles once and my friend was neighbors with him and had many stories... i saw him once. My dad saw him 3 times..

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  2 года назад

      Wow, David, that's incredible. Would love to have seen him play.

  • @uberjam-sam8512
    @uberjam-sam8512 Год назад +3

    This is gold for me! Very excited to dive into the modal practice with the🥶 freeze🥶

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Год назад

      Thanks 🙏 Freeze 🥶 is so useful for practicing this kind of thing.

  • @alexlang178
    @alexlang178 5 месяцев назад +1

    what an awesome lesson! Many thanks!

  • @MrBuniekPolaczek
    @MrBuniekPolaczek 3 года назад +8

    I've just been thinking about how you're my favourite (aka practically musical and useful) jazz guitar educators on YT AND I've been figuring out Miles' solo on So What by ear! The theory behind it is one thing, but his articulation is so awesome you can play the right notes in the right place along with the tune and still sound wrong, lol! Thanks for your work Andy!

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад +1

      Thanks 😎 That's great you've worked out the solo. I love the articulation, so much feel to that solo! Thanks for the comment.

    • @kaynehunter8098
      @kaynehunter8098 2 года назад

      I can agree that he is the best jazz guitar educator. One of the only people I can truly understand and feel like I’m actually learning something from. Thank you for your vids if you read this 🙏🙏

  • @varunchadha5425
    @varunchadha5425 Год назад +1

    Hi mate, that was really cool and I was able to follow what you were sharing easily. Piano player, trying to figure out So What for my first ever jam on Sunday with a fellow jazz beginner. Appreciate you! I'll keep an eye on your videos!

  • @davidkelly1220
    @davidkelly1220 Год назад +1

    Thanks for 📫

  • @andyquelch662
    @andyquelch662 2 года назад +2

    Great lessons Andy, you have a way of explaining jazz guitar that makes sense! (Finally 😊) thanks so much 🙏

  • @marcellaarganese
    @marcellaarganese 3 года назад +2

    Thank you!!! it's the first time that everything seems clear, also by singing the peculiarity of the mode ...it's the first time it sounds so musical

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      No worries Marcella. Really glad to hear you found it helpful :)

  • @sockenfrank
    @sockenfrank 3 года назад +2

    Thank you very much for this lesson.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching and commenting. The next video is also on So What (will be live on Saturday) :)

    • @sockenfrank
      @sockenfrank 3 года назад

      @@jazzguitarwithandy i will be there.

  • @2Large4U
    @2Large4U 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for explaining the technical bits in a way that's easy to understand the base idea so you can take ideas around to other keys! Great vid 👍

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      Glad to hear you feel it's explained well! Thanks for the comment.

  • @jeanneannvalfre9581
    @jeanneannvalfre9581 2 года назад +1

    Great Andy….well put together lesson ……☮️🎶🔛🌎

  • @craighollenback8022
    @craighollenback8022 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic!!! It’s the sound that I’ve been searching for. Thank you!!!

  • @music-collective
    @music-collective Год назад +1

    This a brilliant lesson. I got a lot of it... thanks 👏

  • @annettesomers7463
    @annettesomers7463 2 года назад +1

    Great lesson as usual! Love how you put up diagrams. Thanks!

  • @robertritchie2860
    @robertritchie2860 6 месяцев назад +1

    Very well presented!

  • @varmego1
    @varmego1 2 года назад +2

    Thank you 👍

  • @thijsjansenjazz
    @thijsjansenjazz 2 года назад +1

    Absolute best teacher,!!

  • @ReiTuG
    @ReiTuG 2 года назад +1

    This was a nice lesson, thanks!

  • @benhanbury
    @benhanbury 3 года назад +1

    Great tutorial thanks, really helping me understand how modes work. Love this song

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      Thanks for the comment Ben. Glad you found it helpful. Such a great tune 👍

  • @djekse
    @djekse 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for all you do for us Andy, much appreciated.

  • @collinbergkamp7077
    @collinbergkamp7077 2 года назад

    Great lesson, Man. Thanks! So that's how easy it is to create and comp with those 11th chords. Awesome.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for the comment Colin. Those chords are great sounding 🎸

  • @VitalBigras
    @VitalBigras 2 года назад

    I am rediscovering this great song, Thank You !

  • @dt9r
    @dt9r 3 года назад +1

    Awesome thank you

  • @johnpritchard9753
    @johnpritchard9753 3 года назад +1

    Really enjoyed this. Thanks

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      Thanks for the comment John. There’s a part two to this video.

    • @johnpritchard9753
      @johnpritchard9753 3 года назад

      @@jazzguitarwithandy I've seen it Andy and have subscribed. Thanks

  • @JacobVBurg
    @JacobVBurg 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for this! I've been waiting for a modal video for awhile and this is a perfect place to start. I think Impressions by Coltrane has a similar chord pattern, and alternates on a half-step as well if my memory is accurate. Could you do more? I'd love to go deeper down the modal rabbit hole, but I love all of your content regardless.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      Thanks for the comment. Yes that's right re Coltrane's Impressions. Yes, definitely will look at covering more modal tunes in the future. They are often really fun tunes to play over.

    • @geeflat
      @geeflat 3 года назад +1

      If you like this tune, Impressions, the French Gypsy guitarist Adrien Moinard does a great version of it.

  • @What_If_We_Tried
    @What_If_We_Tried 4 месяца назад +1

    Andy, thanks so much for this tutorial of this fantastic Jazz classic.
    Question: Does your Tele have the 7.25" (184.1 mm), or 9.5 (241 mm) radius neck? Thanks...

  • @jeromelahaye2972
    @jeromelahaye2972 3 года назад +2

    Fantastic lesson! Question: why a b5 in the f chord when you harmonize d Dorian in fourth? It sounds great, definitely, but if in 4th, shouldn’t it be a b flat rather than a b in this f chord?

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад

      Great question Jerome. That's because we are harmonising the Dorian scale and not the D minor scale. Dorian has a B rather than a Bb. Does that make sense?

  • @markmcmyn8967
    @markmcmyn8967 Год назад +1

    4th chords are the easiest way to play jazz sounds-everything seems to work

  • @MorningCarnival
    @MorningCarnival Год назад +1

    Hi Andy, could the same approach be used with Cantelope Island which is in Fm?

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Год назад

      Yes - some of these ideas could work well for the minor chords.

  • @geeflat
    @geeflat 3 года назад +2

    I’d like to offer a different take on this tune (and of modal jazz more generally). Although Kind of Blue was THE big seller in its day, I think of So What as “the tune that killed jazz”. Why? Because this was the moment that jazz became intellectual. And once an artform (any artform) becomes intellectual, the audience for it evaporates. Jazz is now a minority artform. It’s a pity, but this is what happens when intellectuals (like Bill Evans) take over - it’s really satisfying for guys like him and for those of us that can accommodate such a cerebral approach, but it turns off most everyone else.
    As a general comment, modal music - especially modal jazz - can get boring very quickly. It starts off as something fresh and new-sounding, but then it all starts to sound the same. You can get sick of it in a way that doesn’t apply to harmonic music (with all its chord changes).
    While we’re here, let’s talk about Giant Steps. Giant Steps is a tune loved by teachers and students because it’s theory-rich (and I get that). But does anyone really listen to Giant Steps any more? It’s just become an intellectual exercise with little to no non-specialist audience.

    • @IanTOHare
      @IanTOHare 3 года назад +1

      Agree 100%. Great thoughts shared here. I have been thinking about this subject lately as well. Cheers.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  3 года назад +1

      That's a really interesting viewpoint. I've not thought of it from that perspective in regards to this movement in jazz. For me one thing I do appreciate is that it paved the way for songs with very different atmospheres/feel. I love some of the more laid back pieces and then some of the moody songs like Las Vegas Tango.
      As for it being boring, for me sub genres of jazz become that when melody is absent. I'm very much a swing/bebop era fan. When things get into modern jazz I find the absence of melody and sometimes discernible chord changes challenging.
      Giant Steps - it's fun to dive into why the chords work, but I agree, I don't listen to it an awful lot!
      I liken all of the above to the shred metal guitar movement. Now that's music which leaves me cold. Music written for guitarists, not an audience. Technique over feel.

    • @geeflat
      @geeflat 3 года назад

      @@jazzguitarwithandy Glad to hear I’m not the only one who wishes that shredding would just go away!
      On a lighter note, there are two benefits from getting older: one is never having to listen to Autumn Leaves ever again (why oh why do guitar teachers still persist with this tune and flog it to death?); the second is never again having to read anything by Brett Easton Ellis.

    • @geeflat
      @geeflat 3 года назад

      Andy, I’ve just watched this video again and I got a lot out of it. In particular, that part in the middle where you harmonize in fourths (I would never have thought of doing that myself) and the result, at least in your hands, was musical. So, good job.
      Cheers. Geoff, Melbourne.

    • @Arthur_My_Dear
      @Arthur_My_Dear 3 года назад

      This lesson has opened up another avenue to explore. I love the sound of this, maybe because it's different, but I can see how you could get full very quickly