Jazz Guitar Lesson : Creating Tension w/ the Diminished Arpeggio
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- Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
- Jazz Guitar Lesson: Creating Tension w/ the Diminished Arpeggio
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No one explains concepts as well as you do! No one! Thank you so much for your generosity.
Thank you!
Great lesson and very clear explanation. Thanks Chris
Thank you Bruce!
Great content as always and skillfully communicated!
Thank you Rick!
Spoken well. Thank you for sharing your time and knowledge!
Thank you!
Awesome! Please DO take this concept further! Perhaps applying it in the flow of improvisation over II V I’s? Thanks so much for this!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great lesson. Excellent explanation, well designed flowing and connected examples. Thanks.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks
Tasty! Thanks for sharing the good stuff with us, Chris 👌🏻🎸🌹
My pleasure!!
Thx Chris. really helps my ear (and theory) hearing this.
Glad to hear this. Thank you!
Thank you so much! Love your lessons, you are always so Elegant in your Tone, Explanations and playing. Wishing you Great Health & Prosperity!
Thank you Carlos!
Doesn't get any better than Chris. Those of us who watch regularly know that.
Thank you!
I may be coming from far afield, but as soon as I heard the opening pattern, two songs immediately came to mind: East St. Louis Toodle-oo by Duke Ellington, and Let It Whip by Dazz Band. This idea will also work great over the A section of Softly As In A Morning Sunrise.
Yes, good places to try the idea out for sure
@@ChrisWhitemanGuitar What I meant is in the first two aforementioned tunes, the actual melodies “rock back and forth” between minor and diminished, (i and V7alt.), not unlike the Barry Harris concept.
I just got your video as proposal on my youtube home page, I was curious how you would explain the 1/2 dim concept starting 1/2 step below your target chord and ''why'' it works. You nailed it. Thank you. It took me 3:32s to be convinced. One new subscriber!
Thank you!
Incredible content as always, Chris. Thank you very much.
Thanks for watching!
That was super Chris
Thanks Tillman!
So good. Sounds great. Thanks as always for your continued excellent videos/lessons. Always good to see you.
Thanks Drew!!!
Excellent!!! Johnny Smith used this. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Al!
Great discussion, and descriptions. It’s a great sound👏😁👍!
Thank you Barry!
Awesome. Always look forward to these.
Thanks Rich, glad you like them!
Excellent didactic video dear Chris
Great job. Bernard
Thank you Bernard!
Always great stuff Chris.
Thank you!
Excellent lesson! I've almost got it... Cheers.
Great! Thanks Daniel
Great stuff! Thanks 🙏
Glad you liked it!
Nice!
Thanks!
Merci!!
Thank you!
Could you use a similar alternating arpeggio concept on a major chord? What would the two be?
hip😎
thanks 😀