Hi! Thanks for checking out the video. You can use this in your improvisation. Check out Coltrane's song: Countdown. It has those exact changes. Or you can write your own song using those changes or just practice the pattern to crack your brain. It's fun...
Thanks for the vid, but I have a question: How do use that pattern now? I mean you would have to find a (another) song with the exact same chord progression to play this line in an improvisation, don't you? Is it not really a pattern to USE in improvisation or don't I understand this correctly? Can you use that pattern in an improvisation?
Thanks,... some nice ideas. I've been doing a lot of these pattern practices from different sources, like Matt Otto and Charles McNeal. Where did you get this one? Really want to put this one in my practice pac. - E.J.
My problem with pattern work is the absence of results relative to effort applied. It may be incremental but it does not seem to work for me in the moment of improv.
That's a good point. For a long time I used to actively try to apply some of that pattern work into to my solos. Not very creative in the moment, but I think the time was well spent. Thanks for checking it out.
At 4:53 and 5:20 you refer to "major third," but it's in fact a minor third. It's D-flat to B-flat in the first practice pattern and G-flat to E-flat in the second practice pattern.
Hi! Thanks for checking out the video. You can use this in your improvisation. Check out Coltrane's song: Countdown. It has those exact changes. Or you can write your own song using those changes or just practice the pattern to crack your brain. It's fun...
Good explanation. I really need to get Coltrain licks into my piano playing. Going to try to find your interpretation of the chords.
Thanks for the vid, but I have a question: How do use that pattern now? I mean you would have to find a (another) song with the exact same chord progression to play this line in an improvisation, don't you? Is it not really a pattern to USE in improvisation or don't I understand this correctly? Can you use that pattern in an improvisation?
Good Job. I play classical music a try to learn and memorize patterns. But still memorizing is difficult for me. Thanks.
Thanks,... some nice ideas. I've been doing a lot of these pattern practices from different sources, like Matt Otto and Charles McNeal. Where did you get this one? Really want to put this one in my practice pac. - E.J.
My problem with pattern work is the absence of results relative to effort applied. It may be incremental but it does not seem to work for me in the moment of improv.
That's a good point. For a long time I used to actively try to apply some of that pattern work into to my solos. Not very creative in the moment, but I think the time was well spent. Thanks for checking it out.
At 4:53 and 5:20 you refer to "major third," but it's in fact a minor third. It's D-flat to B-flat in the first practice pattern and G-flat to E-flat in the second practice pattern.
thanks!
Try to spice it up a little
BLA BLA BLA FOR ALL....