3 Classic Jazz Licks You Should Know by Now
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 24 июл 2024
- Get "The Last Chord Scale Charts You'll Ever Need" (Free): bit.ly/get-the-charts
MY PIANO COURSES
Chord Theory for R&B Piano: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/cho...
Sick Chords Vol. 1: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/sic...
Stanky Loops: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/sta...
MY SOLOING COURSES:
The Soloing System: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/the...
Chord Tone Magic: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/cho...
Sick Licks: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/sic...
Solo with Soul: go.jeffschneidermusic.com/sol...
FOLLOW ME:
⭐️ Musical Truth Nuggets: JeffSchneiderMusic.com
📸 Instagram: / jeffschneidermusic
🙂 Facebook: / jschneidermusic
🐦 Twitter: / jschneidsmusic Видеоклипы
Pro Tip: The tritone trick works best on dominant 7 licks that don’t have altered notes e.g. b9, #9, #11, b13. Transposing up or down a tritone generates those tensions!
Nice haircut. Don't cut it. Have a great week!
So you have guitars behind you but playing saxophone on the licks! So which is your main axe and why don't you show yourself playing?
thanks jeff. Just bought the stanky loops vol 2! Been waiting all summer to get this! Thanks for teaching us
Craig Caver if you look at Jeff's earlier videos he demos a lot on sax, he's an awesome player. Also a very good keys player. His info on Jazz is spot on.
The reason for this: The b13 of G is the 9 of Db, the b9 of G is the 5 of 5 of Db. Let me summarise: The altered notes of G are (almost...) the mixolydian notes of the tritone. Now let's elaborate on the altered dominant scale...
I’m loving the motion graphics, Jeff! Your videos have always been very professional, but the new graphics have added another layer of quality - and fun!
Thanks, Matt!
@@JeffSchneiderMusic couldn't agree more!! Which tools / software do you use for those graphics?
Loved the video, Jeff!! Yay 🙌
Thanks, Nahre!! Means a lot coming from you!
Thank you for this!
Hey Jeff. Great to see you back. You have been sorely missed. Thanks for sharing this and the free chart. 😎
Please more!!!! Love how you explain each lick (Plus you’re looking slick!)
This is awesome! For me the lightbulb went on when I started looking at licks as sentences - like learning a new language. Up to that time I was concentrating on learning scales, etc. As I learned more licks I started stringing them together and my solos started sounding much better. One of the best books I ever bought was "The BeBop Bible", just full of licks to learn and use.
When you're learning a lick, what attributes do you give it to recall later? Do you learn it in every key? Is there a set process you go through in terms of working over a lick again and again until you internalise it? Thats the sort of content I want .... like, OK, if you allocate 15 minutes of your practice time to licks exclusively, what is the best way to spend those 15 minutes?
Awesome content, the chart is just so beautiful!
wow, you are one of the most intelligent and humble musicians in the web
You make such important points here! This was extremely helpful and definitely broadened my spectrum of potential jazz vocabulary. Thank you!
Your videos are extremely beautiful and awesome! Thx a lot!🎉
Excellent. Very clear and useful. Thanks.
I started watching the channel because of D'angelo, now I'm hooked on all your videos. Your channel is great!!
Fantastic work Jeff. Always explaining so well, thanks buddy.
this is a good tutorial even for guitarists . I didn't even realize it was suppose to be for pianists until i watched your other videos . I am sitting here with a guitar learning these licks.
Great instructional video, thank you for the hard work to share this info.
This is really awesome, thanks Jeff
Wow, that document is a great resource! Thanks for sharing.
I say this on a lot of Jeff's videos - They are so helpful for breaking out of guitar pattern ruts.
Your videos have helped me considerably.
The video editing on this is beautiful
Thank Jeff, really helpful - and I like the unique way you presented these ideas!
great for motivation and the shed , as ever thanks Jeffers
You bet
Your chord scale charts are clever, with the horizontal and vertical layout. I've never seen it like this, well done.
Great stuff Jeff!
Muy bueno Jeff!!! Gracias!!!
Awesome Jeff. Your delivery ( not too nerdy) makes these super easy to grab,analysis was just enough. Thks, jimmy
way to go Jeff, and thanks again for another inspiring lesson! thanks for the chord chart!
I just want to say I love how you put your ideas into the context of the music philosophically. Personally, I just can't seem to learn well when I'm just told what to do and not given context. A good context is like walking into a lighted room.
Oh this is fun to look at, it is refreshing my mind!
Thanks Jeff, fantastic quality content as ever. I don't think it's too nerdy or technical - we come here for music theory and you make it accessible. Not spoon fed, but enough to make us do the work and get the results. Keep it coming!
Jeff Schneider. GENIUS
What an incredibly well put together and helpful video. Thanks as always, Jeff!
I've been playing those exact phrases for the past 40 years. Great stuff! Thanks!
Thank you for explaining so clearly. Much better than many others. Great job.
This is truly an excellent video. I appreciate it from both the point of of view of a musician and a youtube creator
Spot on analysis - Dexter and Sonny always quoted other tunes and "simple" riffs - that's what makes their sound so authentic AND appealing in my opinion.
Great succinct lesson and awesome animations. Thanks!
Thanks, Jeff - Much appreciated! I downloaded your Chord Scale Charts. They are super helpful.
Great stuff!
Dang thank you Jeff. Also nice lighting
Hi, you convinced me of the usefulness of working with licks. I never felt like doing it because I didn't want to feel like a parrot. But the comparison with common expressions is more than convincing.
Thank you, and I can already feel the benefits. Thx from France. 👍
Great stuff Jeff
Thanks for the lesson!
Great work on the chord scales charts, nicely done and well explained
Big thanks for Your's content!
Great tutorials and many many thanks for the Last Chord Scale charts. Utterly brilliant and excellent video. Have been looking for this for ages. I’m a beginner/ perhaps just intermediate of a ‘certain age’ and playing alto. A bit passionate about jazz !
Thank you for this superb explanation and merry Christmas from Austria
Thank you so much for the " ...super nerdy..." video.
At last I've found that classic jazz sound I 've been looking for for so long! I'm thrilled!!
Wonderful! Combination of licks approach and theory. Me gusta
Loving the new format
You really improved the quality of not just the overall image/color grading but also the way you are presenting the info. Really cool!
Excellent lesson (pace & content) Mr. Schneider!
I thought for a second why I’m subscribed to Bradley Cooper😂
😂😂
He look so good with that hair
Haha I had to comment that's exactly I was thinking, then I saw your comment!!
If Bradley cooper and the lie to me guy had a son. Precious lesson btw
I had already typed "Is this Jeff Schneider or Bradley Cooper?" but before I hit reply, I decided to ctrl + f "Bradley" and I see you beat me too it sir.
Great stuff, not too long, well explained, right amount of info
Nice new format! I know I've been farming it but I like how when you take the David Baker Bepop lick and immediately play it a tritone apart you get a 12 tone row. I also like to displace the last two notes an octave up
Great Video! using the example from Donna Lee was super helpful, I'll have to go back and pick some favorite bebop phrases to transpose and use alterations... It made a lot of sense with the visual example.
great vid man. david baker and jerry coker's books/materials really opened my eyes on the "dialect" of different styles/genres/eras by looking at idiomatic licks and phrasing approaches.
first it helped me recognize how to approach that improvising jazz, but then i saw how that concept extended out to any genre, whether it was bluegrass or baroque or whatever. they're all using the same note "alphabet" but knowing different idioms/phrases allows you to fit into those different musical dialects (it also helps with analysis/quicker sight reading). i think of it like an actor speaking different dialects depending on the role.
Phenomenal video, so educational. Love these licks!
Great lesson. Thank you.
Very effective explanation. Thanks for giving me homework for tonight plus more!
O lord. You are proof, that nothing is original especially you... this was great, my music teacher this back in 1989 at Watertown described it as normal English and or southern voice.
Good shit...
Thanks Jeff👍🏾🙏🏽
Fully enjoyed this tritone trick! Awesome💜
Great video Jeff! Really well done.
Jeff is not lying. These are indeed the last chord scale charts you'll ever need. Great job.
Great máster, excellent greetings from Paraguay 👍👍👍👌👌I love jazz
This is some good stuff Jeff!
Brilliant teaching style Jeff.
Thanks for the lick, nice one to practise indeed. cheers
Luv it.......Bring back video of the week.....God Bless Loop of the week ##
Very cool Jeff, love the tritone sub licks.
Great one! Thanks!
thanks a lot its very clear and useful
The "HeyeverybodyJeffSchneiderhere!" made me check if I was on 1.5 speed... lol
Gang of GreenHorns exatamente
Beautiful
Thank you Jeff for this clear and great explanation. Very very helpful! I just subscribed to your channel! Thanks for sharing! Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Stay healthy!
I was confused by a term I heard you mention once or twice...
what is a "note"?
Just came across your channel and happy to say you've earned a subscriber! Couldn't be happier with the free download. I feel like I need to grasp the technical stuff. Maybe not all of it, but the chord progression along with major scales is really a good start. If you offer a beginner's crash course on analyzing music/music theory in relation to jazz, I would be interested 😁 thanks again for the free download!
Great explanation.
תודה רבה!
This is one o the most useful RUclips lessons I’ve ever seen. Thank you, sir.
you need to stay in more :D
Excellent
awesome video, really helped me out a ton thanks!
Well put analogy. Gonna steal that
Great video!
Get eeem Jeff! Great teaching man!
This is super rad 👐
Great to see you dude! Awesome as usual!😀🙌🏼
Thank you for the generous chord charts and the licks for days. They are both great resource materials for the shed. I just watched another video that said scales are the alphabet and although I got the guys point it just resonated more when you said notes are the alphabet. Which in my mind makes the licks like words. And of course I could try to carry out the analogy ad infinitum but instead I’ll just thank you again for pointing out the yellow brick road.
Good to see ya
Amazing video! Thanks 👍
Good stuff!
Wow! Somebody knows about David Baker! Thank you so much Jeff... loved the presentation!
I like your sense of humor man! 🤣🤣
Thanks for the licks ✌🏽
Thank you for this Jeff :)
Thank you so much
Great to see you again 😎
Muito bom, Jeff! 🎶🎷Obrigado from Brasil. 🇧🇷
good stuff - thanks!
Thanks Jeff I really appreciate these licks and will definitely be using them. Though, right now I’m really working on gaining fluidity in enclosures, approach notes, and altered extensions.
I tried to alter my extension - but I couldn't get planning permission. . .