All of me - how to improvise in gypsy jazz

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 57

  • @xxbstpagexx
    @xxbstpagexx 2 месяца назад +1

    Brilliantly simple. Thank you.

  • @bigmistake5565
    @bigmistake5565 2 года назад +2

    I love how much the chords of all of me imply the melody

  • @soniatiwari3579
    @soniatiwari3579 2 года назад +1

    This guy knows what he his doing! Great job!

  • @xOxsleepyheadxOx
    @xOxsleepyheadxOx 9 месяцев назад +1

    you have a great skill in teaching and you play very well too.

  • @lusilva7295
    @lusilva7295 2 года назад

    Thanks for being such an amazing teacher and inspiration for us all. From Honolulu-Hawaii. Lu

  • @alanwann9318
    @alanwann9318 3 года назад

    Sven ,this is the best teach so far

  • @merlinzest
    @merlinzest 2 года назад +1

    wonderful content sven thanks for ur help

  • @KerryFreemanMelbourne
    @KerryFreemanMelbourne 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great usable information,,,

  • @johnholohan6584
    @johnholohan6584 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much. Loved your ideas.

  • @muggo131
    @muggo131 5 лет назад +3

    Thank you Sven. Your videos are such a valuable resource. The rare combination of an excellent player and teacher.

  • @SERJ4MAN
    @SERJ4MAN 2 года назад

    Great teacher!Thank you!

  • @MorningCarnival
    @MorningCarnival Год назад

    This is brilliant. I’m learning the arpeggios but this gives me a lot of material to think about. thanks. great Chanel.

  • @davidwilliamson9462
    @davidwilliamson9462 Год назад

    Yeah I’m working on all of me. This lesson is fantastic. I’ve been playing GJ for 18 months, in a general way. Now I’m concentrating on songs. Ps!! Sven. What is the exact guitar model you are playing in this video. Many thanks. Willl.

  • @christophemarybrasse8857
    @christophemarybrasse8857 3 года назад +1

    As I read the others cmments... I agree with : Your teaching are super Goood!

  • @superalbertos550
    @superalbertos550 5 лет назад +1

    That lick that you called not creative is amazing!!! You should teach that, sounds fabulous! It´s very fast to catch all of it. Thanks for the lesson

  • @anthonydlima99
    @anthonydlima99 2 года назад

    Sven you are great guitarist.And very good master class

  • @flxwlbrg
    @flxwlbrg 3 года назад +1

    Danke! Half mir enorm

  • @Nelvis3
    @Nelvis3 3 года назад

    Thanks Sven! I appreciate how you started with a pentatonic scale then break it down to show the chord tones. I have watch this video several times and it's slowly sinking in. lol

  • @davidkelly1220
    @davidkelly1220 3 года назад +1

    Superb video

  • @Syncroschannel
    @Syncroschannel 5 лет назад +2

    beautifully precise playing, great ideas..

  • @richardsullivan6297
    @richardsullivan6297 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you Sven. This video covers miles of territory in an efficient and digestible way. A great and useful video!

  • @selcukoktay
    @selcukoktay 5 лет назад +1

    Really really very helpful, great video. Thanks a lot...

  • @igorlezhepekov
    @igorlezhepekov 4 года назад

    Finally I found really helpful video about improvisation! Thank you very much!

  • @ronbentley6102
    @ronbentley6102 5 лет назад +1

    Great lesson,thanks!

  • @marcospedicato1360
    @marcospedicato1360 5 лет назад +1

    Very clear and very useful. Thank you!

  • @zygotegarden
    @zygotegarden 5 лет назад +6

    Even though this lesson is too advanced for me (I'm a beginner), I understood more about the big picture of what I need to learn and even why. It was very concise and carefully explained. Now I'm more motivated to do the less "fun stuff" (scales and learning the fretboard) so I can improve but I also have a few tips from you that I can apply right away. Thank you!

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  5 лет назад +1

      thanks for your kind words! I hope you will elvolve quickly. for learning arpeggios there is a great book by Michael Sagmeister:
      Arpeggios in Jazz ( or something like that) that I recommend!

    • @zygotegarden
      @zygotegarden 5 лет назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Thank you very much for the book recommendation - I'll look it up. :-)

  • @erimsee
    @erimsee 5 лет назад +7

    Great video! I like that you mention licks not as the first idea. First learn the notes on the fretboard, then learn licks and understand why and how they work. Lots of stuff to work on.

  • @WPLGuitar.Journey
    @WPLGuitar.Journey 4 года назад +1

    Thx for sharing Sven!! Great Lesson!

  • @StevesBeyondRepair
    @StevesBeyondRepair 5 лет назад +2

    Sven, your teaching is sooo good, and sooo motivating!! Thank you!!

  • @dingoswamphead
    @dingoswamphead 4 года назад

    Great ideas Sven, from the delightfully simple to what gets us really thinking. Thanks.

  • @gerrypower8350
    @gerrypower8350 5 лет назад +1

    Many thanks Sven

  • @joecahill4164
    @joecahill4164 2 года назад

    Great lesson...Curios...Make and Model of the guitar? thank you...

  • @johnrothfield6126
    @johnrothfield6126 4 года назад

    Great lesson

  • @blindpink
    @blindpink 2 года назад

    Do you have any tips for right hand chromatic descending/ascending runs.....???

  • @jakemf1
    @jakemf1 5 лет назад +1

    Love this- more please-other tunes- how about with more ii-v’s

  • @Djangorecordings
    @Djangorecordings 5 лет назад +2

    Hi Sven. Fantastic video. I love them all, particularly this one and the minor blues lesson on improvising. Can I ask you, how do you know what the special notes are? Is it from the melody, is it from the differences to the C Major scale? I have always tried to hit the root of each chord, this idea of hitting the 3rd of the secondary dominant is new to me. Is that always the special note for secondary dominants? Teach me !!!!......please :)

    • @marcot117
      @marcot117 5 лет назад +1

      Well to know the "special" note in secundary dominants you need to identify the notes of the secundary dominants that are outside the Main scale and replace them

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  5 лет назад

      @@marcot117 thank you, absolutely.

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  5 лет назад

      Marcot's answer is very good.

  • @karolygyorgypal3424
    @karolygyorgypal3424 4 года назад

    Hi Sven
    Nice playing ,can I ask what kind of microphone you’re using in your guitar.
    Have a nice day!!!
    Karl

  • @phmusik9131
    @phmusik9131 5 лет назад +1

    so kostbar! danke für die viele arbeit Sven, ich hoffe es zahlt sich irgendwie aus!

  • @michaelcorcoran3942
    @michaelcorcoran3942 2 года назад

    Ahhh did the whole scale mistake myself. Is your point being basically know your relative minor which I just call the 6th and major which is the 1st. And then just reference everything to that. i.e in this case you sharpen the G (the 5th) to G#

  • @DjangoThunders
    @DjangoThunders 5 лет назад +1

    Hey Sven, love the lessons. Have you done any videos where you talk about your guitars?

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  5 лет назад +1

      Hi,
      not yet, but this one is a volkert guitar, a very good builder from germany. Joscho Stephan and Diknu Schneeberger are his most famous endorsers.
      My second guitar for gypsy swing is a Höfner from 1956. Also a German builder.
      I have a Taylor, a dobro from gretch and a mandolin " the loar"
      These are the instruments I use on stage. the rest is not worth telling.
      I sold a telecaster usa several months ago and badly miss it 😂

    • @DjangoThunders
      @DjangoThunders 5 лет назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Thanks! I have a 76 Tele. It ain't going anywhere! Recently I am hooked on my own model I call the Djangothunders guitar. Shaped like a Selmer but about the size of a Tele. One P90 and a wraparound tailpiece. Basswood body with black walnut neck.

  • @danhope77
    @danhope77 3 года назад

    Great! Yes pentatonic with some chromatism and harmonic minor (A7-Dm7) it s all you need But I would consider trying all the arpeggios except for the turnaround

  • @mibo758
    @mibo758 5 лет назад +1

    Why is G# the third of E7?! Can you explain it? Thank you

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  5 лет назад +1

      A third is a whole tone plus a half tone step, in a major third the whole tone comes first, in a minor third it is the other way round.
      The note gsharp is the major third of e. That's intervals! One of the most fundamental stuff in music theory. Music sounds good, because notes have different spaces between them. Those spaces are called: interval. 😉

  • @DYLANV-h5p
    @DYLANV-h5p Год назад

    Can you do all this without knowing as much theory as you , as my theory knowledge is lacking when it comes to note names

  • @hearpalhere
    @hearpalhere 3 года назад

    This is incredible Sven, thank you so much! This is one of the first times I've seen an explanation on improvising in this style that I can actually understand. Your first tip is awesome! I've been working on your other video showing the chords of the song for a couple of weeks and finally getting comfortable with the new (to me) shapes. Really enjoying your videos, thanks!

  • @satoriw9501
    @satoriw9501 3 года назад

    I dont understand what you Say on scale in 12:52 .
    I think It Is very good exercise but i dont understand

  • @coyotezinho
    @coyotezinho 22 часа назад

    Desisto. Não sai nada daí.

  • @jbowerman50
    @jbowerman50 Год назад

    My mind thinks in : pentatonic With embellishments to suit the progression. It might actually end up being 7,8,9,10,11,12 notes depending on how the chords move. And yes sometimes it is an actual chromatic movement.