scale madness part 1 - what to (really) play in gypsy jazz

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 77

  • @petersneddon1579
    @petersneddon1579 Месяц назад +1

    I'm taking up gypsy jazz playing at 65 years old after 55 years of playing rock music, I'm so glad to have found this young fella who is a natural teacher and very fine player. thank you Sven.

  • @LEOPORT5
    @LEOPORT5 3 года назад +16

    Best gypsy teacher on the internet

    • @Marubi2
      @Marubi2 8 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed 👍

  • @displaychicken
    @displaychicken 3 года назад +24

    This is a tremendously important lesson and concept. It’s precisely what I’ve been focusing on over the past year or so and my playing has improved more in that time than the previous 20 years combined. People should really follow your advice.
    I’d love to see you do the minor chord as well.

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +1

      All chords will be uploaded soon!

  • @chrisdavlantes8750
    @chrisdavlantes8750 3 года назад +7

    Sven, you're such a godsend.

  • @bathroompass
    @bathroompass 3 года назад +6

    Very helpful, thanks for the videos. The proper chord videos are super helpful as well, but seeing more of this, including a breakdown of a minor chord and other chord types, would be much appreciated. Keep up the great work!

  • @kermitpeterson
    @kermitpeterson 3 года назад +5

    Wish I had this quality of teaching when I started learning. Would've helped me a lot, well done.

  • @dingoswamphead
    @dingoswamphead 3 года назад +2

    So valuable and systematic. You have answered so many questions I have wondered about for years, and given me a direction to pursue for a long time. It is practical ear training, turned into music.

  • @rogerstonemuisc
    @rogerstonemuisc 3 года назад +1

    Awesome lesson.. You are very generous to share this information with everyone. Please ignore the thumbs down. People who are not ready to receive information, are not able to understand what you're talking about. Thanks so much !

  • @hamzou2
    @hamzou2 3 года назад +2

    This is insanity! Thanks for giving lessons we simply cannot play guitar without playing gypsy guitar

  • @edwardfranceschini1774
    @edwardfranceschini1774 3 года назад +1

    Fantastic lesson More more more please thanks for your knowledge and effort thanks

  • @GeeksPlayOfficial
    @GeeksPlayOfficial 3 года назад

    This kind of lessons are rare to find ! All the videos are worth so much. Thanks very much.

  • @johncummins3254
    @johncummins3254 3 года назад +1

    Sven another great lesson. My understanding of how to play this music and how it all hangs together has improved dramatically since I started watching your videos. Thanks I look forward to more. John

  • @hearpalhere
    @hearpalhere 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for another fantastic lesson Sven! I'm learning so much from you because you give us a way to make use of what you're teaching in a musical way, pretty much instantly.

  • @aybabtu2834
    @aybabtu2834 Год назад +1

    sometimes juste a short video is enough ! thx a lot Sven

  • @mrbanksy7303
    @mrbanksy7303 3 года назад +1

    Thanks Sven. Such a good teacher - getting down to the essence

  • @alward5678
    @alward5678 2 года назад +1

    Great lessons. Thank you

  • @berwickpatterson2367
    @berwickpatterson2367 8 месяцев назад +2

    You're an excellent teacher, Sven.

  • @ilkayatay87
    @ilkayatay87 3 года назад +1

    wonderful teacher !

  • @jaredtousain
    @jaredtousain 3 года назад +1

    Thank you very much. This helps a lot!

  • @numero6jbs
    @numero6jbs Месяц назад

    Waiting for the video for minor etc... :) BTW, I already said that, but very warm and beautiful tone !!!

  • @meuconsagrado
    @meuconsagrado 3 года назад +1

    Thank you so much

  • @gerrypower8350
    @gerrypower8350 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for a great lesson

  • @jadenavery2341
    @jadenavery2341 10 месяцев назад

    Best lesson ive ever had. THANKYOU

  • @aberhan
    @aberhan 3 года назад

    Absolutely, a scale by itself sounds like nothing. (but a scale) 👍 Which explains why so many shredders play it at lightning speed, to try and make it sound like something. I like your approach.

  • @joelove7662
    @joelove7662 3 года назад +1

    Ich bin total begeistert von deiner Art die Dinge zu erklären.
    Habe mich direkt in dem "scale Gitarristen" wiedergefunden. Dein Lösungsansatz für das Problem trifft bei mir voll auf den Punkt. 👍

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +1

      Bei den meisten Gitarristen ist das zu einem bestimmten Punkt so, es gibt ja auch Stile wo man mit Scales prima klarkommt. Es freut mich, dass mein Video für dich eine Hilfe ist.
      Viele Grüße!

    • @joelove7662
      @joelove7662 3 года назад +1

      Beim wiederholten sehen stellt sich mir die Frage was "avoid notes" für dich ausmacht? Hast du Lust das kurz zu umschreiben?
      Danke im voraus

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +2

      @@joelove7662 Töne die man vermeiden sollte. Je nachdem wie man klingen möchte und welchen Stil man spielen will, sind das auf ein und demselben Akkord manchmal ganz unterschiedliche Töne.
      Grundsätzlich kann man ja spielen was man will, aber Stile zu lernen und Regeln zu befolgen verschafft uns ja anfangs überhaupt erst die Möglichkeit differenziert und akkurat zu musizieren, denke ich jedenfalls 😉

    • @joelove7662
      @joelove7662 3 года назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Danke für deine schnellen Antworten.
      Ich bin schon häufiger über den Begriff der "avoid notes" gestolpert und konnte leider keine "richtige Definition" finden. Habe es mir bisher halt nur selbst zusammen gereimt was damit gemeint ist.
      Meine Überlegung war folgende:
      Avoid notes sind grundsätzlich alle Töne auf denen man nicht "landen" sollte beim isolieren. So wären , bei einem normalen dur Dreiklang die Stufen 2,4,6 und 7 avoid notes. Also alle Töne die nicht im aktuellen Dreiklang enthalten sind. Kann man das so generell sagen?

  • @jakollee
    @jakollee 3 года назад +1

    At 5:47, I thought for a moment you were going to play the Tennessee Waltz! Great lesson, thanks!

  • @adelaidd194511
    @adelaidd194511 3 года назад +1

    Thank you,Sven. Very interesting. Cпасибо✌

  • @rainfieldmusic
    @rainfieldmusic 2 года назад +1

    Excellent
    Keep it simple 👌

  • @roidochannel7086
    @roidochannel7086 3 года назад

    Thank you for this, exactly what I need as a beginner in gypsy jazz improvisation

  • @ThomasHope73
    @ThomasHope73 3 года назад

    Great teaching style; adding context to detail, without being confusing. Subscribed! 🙂👍

  • @zaherfaraj4936
    @zaherfaraj4936 9 месяцев назад

    great lesson thank you

  • @i.m.6115
    @i.m.6115 3 года назад

    Excellent video, thank you 👍👍👍

  • @uritheural
    @uritheural 9 месяцев назад

    This is very helpful. Thank you 😊

  • @CroissantBandit
    @CroissantBandit Год назад +1

    omg so much help! thanks!

  • @kwright3929
    @kwright3929 3 года назад +1

    Really good lesson. Subbed!

  • @j.r.goldman3279
    @j.r.goldman3279 3 года назад

    TY

  • @phlox7792
    @phlox7792 3 года назад +4

    Great video. I'd like some help this way with approaching dominant, diminished and whole tone sounds if you can. I've been looking at some of Djangos solo improvisations and while a lot of it is cycles of the same progressions over and over his use of harmonic devices and dominant tensions are what make the movement through the same harmony so much more compelling. I'm trying to get to that point where I have a lot of options for tension and adding movement to my playing but its a slow process as always. Thanks!

  • @gustavorodrigues3826
    @gustavorodrigues3826 2 года назад

    Thanks man!

  • @precastengineer
    @precastengineer 3 года назад

    Thanks Sven, love your videos

  • @Matthew-pf9mj
    @Matthew-pf9mj 2 года назад

    Geesh this is gold

  • @davidkelly831
    @davidkelly831 3 года назад

    Useful, succinct overview

  • @georgechristiansen6785
    @georgechristiansen6785 3 года назад +2

    Great explanation!
    Only thing I suggest and do differently is focus on the interval names and fingerings more so than the note names per se.
    Obviously you need to know the note names to even find the 1, but it is faster to think "Where is the 3rd of G" and play it than to think "The third of G is B...now where is B" and then play it.

    • @dingoswamphead
      @dingoswamphead 3 года назад +1

      I struggle here too, but once it is firmly in your nut that the 3rd of G is B and they are interchangeable, it might increase your flexibility, as you would know that the 3rd of G is also the 5th of E, the 6th of D and so on. Actually this has given me an idea for an ear training exercise: play the B against G, then E, D etc. What do you think?

    • @nicolasmecaj
      @nicolasmecaj 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@dingoswampheadI'm entering this conversation 3 years later, the approach that's working better on me is playing all diatonic chords with 7 as well, checking all the intervals, the triads and the note names xD so everything all together basically would be the best in my opinion.
      Because of the fact that I transcribed all of the diatonic arpeggios in all the positions and I strongly use the name of the notes rather than the number of them in the diatonic arpeggios when I get into improvising on a scale mode shape for example or just if I think about it like 'starting from a string' rather than from a position, but and the same time while moving across the fretboard using the very same diatonic arpeggios to improvise I tend to search for the intervals first, while thinking about what chord arpeggio I'm playing at least,

  • @breeffy
    @breeffy 3 месяца назад

    Fantastique as usual. Thanks so much Sven.
    I dont understand though when you say that C is an avoid note in the G major scale ?

  • @viktorviktor9995
    @viktorviktor9995 3 года назад

    Vielen Dank Sven!

  • @ridgerunner4943
    @ridgerunner4943 3 года назад +1

    I can't wait until Scale Madness Part 2!

  • @superflysoulbrother
    @superflysoulbrother 3 года назад

    im impressed you could sing that high b note lol

  • @corneliousism
    @corneliousism 3 года назад

    This is a good angle to take when learning, personally I don’t see any help in learning the letter/name of the note, understanding visually the chords and where each note from the arpeggio is should be enough for you to allow your ear to guide you. After all music is you making sounds by moving around in patterns. It seems to be an unnecessary extra thing to learn note names.
    I’m with you totally on your angle involving focusing around chord tones and then playing chromatically into it.
    Thanks for all your lessons Sven. Your a great teacher !

    • @corneliousism
      @corneliousism 3 года назад

      Oh I would also like pdfs of the proper chords series, do you have this as a Patreon bonus which I could subscribe or just make a donation for?

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +3

      Hey, concerning the note names I can say, that the way you organize your stuff doesn't matter, as long as you got the fretboard under your control. Stochelo Rosenberg for example, I played gigs with him, talked to him. He says" I don't know any theory " that's actually not true.
      Only thing he doesn't know are the terms to name it.
      If you find the notes it doesn't matter, but for not so talented players it's an additional help.
      And that's not meant to sound disrespectful. It's a vast range of talent and I'm surely not a genius.
      But however you do it. You need the sounds precisely at your command.
      Against a donation I can send you my chord glossary and minor swing plus Troublante Bolero in detail.
      The chord glossary contains all important voicings from the same root. So you got to move them yourself.
      All the best,
      Sven!

  • @cscochran
    @cscochran 3 года назад +1

    This is super helpful. Just to clarify--when you apply this to improvisation, you have to change which triad notes you are landing on/working with every time the chord changes right? So you really need to know the chord progression beforehand.

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +1

      Hi,
      That's how it works!
      Being the music instead of playing a scale patterns "to" the music.
      😀👌

    • @cscochran
      @cscochran 3 года назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Awesome. Sounds a bit daunting, but I'm very excited about changing the way I approach soloing. Thanks so much!

    • @cscochran
      @cscochran 3 года назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Oh, that reminds me of one further question. When the rhythm player plays those quick (1 or 2 strum) embellishment chords in between the main chords (like to walk the bass or something), do you follow that in your solo and briefly use the new triad, or is it so quick you can ignore it? I would think you might need to follow them, but the rhythm player often adds those embellishment chords in on the spot, right? So you wouldn't know beforehand where to go next.

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад +1

      @@cscochran no need to follow! Think simple in the melody.
      These passing chords are not recognized by one's ear as new harmonies that matter. We tend to hear harmony in its most direct meaning, even if people are not educated at all.
      So we hear
      - this is tonic like
      - subtonic like
      - that goes there.... etc

    • @cscochran
      @cscochran 3 года назад

      @@SvenJungbeck Great, makes sense. Thanks!

  • @CallMetheMusicMan
    @CallMetheMusicMan Год назад +1

    Are you using a pick on nylon strings?

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  Год назад +1

      This is a steel string guitar !

    • @CallMetheMusicMan
      @CallMetheMusicMan Год назад

      @@SvenJungbeck the headstock threw me for a loop. Great lesson, though!

  • @themusiccovenant
    @themusiccovenant 3 года назад +1

    Gypsy King 🤴

  • @boOoq1
    @boOoq1 3 года назад

    Regards.

  • @2jazzed
    @2jazzed 6 месяцев назад

    Why do you start the G Major 7 with the F#…..F# G B D?

  • @AndreJDaniels
    @AndreJDaniels 3 года назад +1

    This is great stuff but I find it difficult to pick up the chords he is using and/or sit through the fingering. I would pay good money for the chord charts to these Proper chords lessons

    • @SvenJungbeck
      @SvenJungbeck  3 года назад

      Hi Andre,
      Just give me your email!
      I can send you a chord glossary.
      Then you can PayPal me on my email:
      Sven.jungbeck9@gmail.com
      What you consider as decent.😉
      What do you think?

  • @poisonapple1991
    @poisonapple1991 Год назад

    Singing the added 2 arpeggio backwards really makes you a dbag 😁

  • @geetarwanabe
    @geetarwanabe 3 года назад +1

    Love your playing but music theory is so boring 😴😪

    • @thewiltedplums
      @thewiltedplums 3 года назад +8

      You picked a hell of a genre to not like theory...😂

    • @phlox7792
      @phlox7792 3 года назад +7

      as far as theory goes this was very very light. merely just talking about intervals to add color.