Scott!!! You have done It AGAIN, sir!!! BRILLIANT and altogether SPECTACULAR! The break down. The simplicity. The demonstration. The application. Sheer genius! If I had this kind of tutoring when I had just started out, is have probably been further ahead much sooner! Awesome job!
Thank you very much, I love your tutorials and this one is particularly good and useful. As said before, it will (need to..) be seen over and over again. Adding what all scales sound like is very helpful too. Keep it on! Greetings from Bavaira/Germany 😎😎
Thank your for another video. I understand what you are saying and you are explaining it very clearly. I’m a tenor swing jazz player. However, I’m very bad on musical theory as I have always relied on my good ear (at least I think it’s good). But listening to what you say, I don’t see how to apply those different scales into a solo. I’m soloing over the chords. I don’t know what the chords are, but I hear them very well, so where do those different scales come in?
@@hansmathiasthjomoe4817 Hello Hans, I have no idea why you're asking me that question. I only understood 50% of the video and with time I hope to understand the other half. Good luck with your chords. You're way ahead of me.🙂
Hi Scott,,you sound Amazing,,hey do you transcribe music for tenor sax? i'd love to learn so many songs,for instance some Journey tunes,,or maybe any suggestions how to find someone??thank you.
Hi Scott. This is my first time commenting. Tap on “comments” for text field then it appears. I really need to slow down 😅. I love all the videos and the minors esp since I have ignored them for so long how could I have forgotten about them, thank-you Scott!
Hey Wendi! Thanks for commenting. Yeah, there are so many minors they get confusing, and often times when we are talking about scales, we refer to major, but the minors are super important - especially in the world of improv. Thanks again for checking out my channel.
C aeolian comes from the root of Eb and is it‘s parallel minor. If you want to play the C-Scale from A it is A-aeolian and that is the parallel Minor of the root C. If you name a scale aeolian you know allways that it is a 6th Mode of a Major-Scale
Hi scott..Im your fan..And I fallowing you.First I thanks for your valuable lesson.I have one request for you..Can you make a lesson how to improvise With Dj.(deep house music) thank you..❤❤
Hey Scott. Great content as always. Im a pro sax player in Az. Trained out of LA. I do a lot of self recordings and covers as well as winery gigs. Ive always wondered about what mics you use for sax when recording videos like this. Do you have any recommendations for good mics that work for tutorials or recordings like this?
Wow! This was jam packed with awesome information. I will be watching this video more than once ...likely, more than twice. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful, those minor scales can get confusing pretty quick.
Scott!!! You have done It AGAIN, sir!!!
BRILLIANT and altogether SPECTACULAR!
The break down. The simplicity. The demonstration. The application.
Sheer genius! If I had this kind of tutoring when I had just started out, is have probably been further ahead much sooner!
Awesome job!
Thank you so much! Glad that it helped. I try to keep things simple and move from one thing to the next with small steps.
Great stuff! One of my fav minor scales: The "GYPSY SCALE" => Harmonic minor with a sharp 4th. Quite exotic sound!
You are so darn good at what you do! You have the gift of being able to provide clear and to the point explanations.
Thank you!
Thank you very much, I love your tutorials and this one is particularly good and useful. As said before, it will (need to..) be seen over and over again. Adding what all scales sound like is very helpful too. Keep it on! Greetings from Bavaira/Germany 😎😎
Another great lesson scott and thanks for the improv tips too very interesting
I actually understood some of that. Good clear explanation on a basic level. Well done Scott !!🙂
Thanks! That is what I was going for. Explaining everything at a basic level so that it all made sense.
Thank your for another video. I understand what you are saying and you are explaining it very clearly. I’m a tenor swing jazz player. However, I’m very bad on musical theory as I have always relied on my good ear (at least I think it’s good). But listening to what you say, I don’t see how to apply those different scales into a solo. I’m soloing over the chords. I don’t know what the chords are, but I hear them very well, so where do those different scales come in?
@@hansmathiasthjomoe4817 Hello Hans, I have no idea why you're asking me that question. I only understood 50% of the video and with time I hope to understand the other half. Good luck with your chords. You're way ahead of me.🙂
Nice teaching.. thanks
Yeah like the harmonic minor too...also the blues scale.
This will be by far the best video ever on this subject.👏 Man!! thank you for sharing this video and taking your time to teach others.. awesome
I'm glad I was able to help you straighten those minor scales out. They can be really confusing!
@@ScottPaddock I have subscribed to your channel and looking forward to learning more from you.
Soon I will be buying your classes for sure 👍
Got it! ❤
Well explained
Hi Scott,,you sound Amazing,,hey do you transcribe music for tenor sax? i'd love to learn so many songs,for instance some Journey tunes,,or maybe any suggestions how to find someone??thank you.
Very helpful, thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hi Scott. This is my first time commenting. Tap on “comments” for text field then it appears. I really need to slow down 😅. I love all the videos and the minors esp since I have ignored them for so long how could I have forgotten about them, thank-you Scott!
Hey Wendi! Thanks for commenting. Yeah, there are so many minors they get confusing, and often times when we are talking about scales, we refer to major, but the minors are super important - especially in the world of improv. Thanks again for checking out my channel.
C aeolian comes from the root of Eb and is it‘s parallel minor. If you want to play the C-Scale from A it is A-aeolian and that is the parallel Minor of the root C. If you name a scale aeolian you know allways that it is a 6th Mode of a Major-Scale
Hi scott..Im your fan..And I fallowing you.First I thanks for your valuable lesson.I have one request for you..Can you make a lesson how to improvise With Dj.(deep house music) thank you..❤❤
Sax & DJ is on the list!!
I search that lesson but I can't find it.Can you please send me the link that video ??
Hey Scott. Great content as always. Im a pro sax player in Az. Trained out of LA. I do a lot of self recordings and covers as well as winery gigs. Ive always wondered about what mics you use for sax when recording videos like this. Do you have any recommendations for good mics that work for tutorials or recordings like this?
Hey Miles! For recording content and videos I use a Shure 98H clip-on mic. For live gigs, I use a Shure wireless system.
Fun trivia: The well known classical song, Solfeggietto (CPE Bach) uses melodic minor ascending and descending.
😁😁
The original JS Bach sometimes did melodic minor both directions as well.
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