Excellent tutorial!!! Matteo Mancuso is A BEAST!!! Oscar Peterson was A FORCE OF NATURE and in a class by himself!!! Miles was a master musician and a trailblazer!
Hey Nathan, thank you so much! That's the goal to do all the learning straight from the music of the greats. BTW your channel it's amazing, I am a fan.
Roque, you’re a great teacher! I sometimes see this in some Pat Martino transcriptions. It sounds great, but didn’t really know how to practice it. You’ve given me some great ideas.
Thanks for the compliment! I’m glad it was helpful! All great players I’ve come across always develop their own exercises according to the things they need to get better at. Go ahead!!
@@roquedeschamps Wayne Shorter also does a similar chromatic in his solo, Herbie also. To be honest I think in MIles' later solos he overused that lick a bit. I also checked out your Lennie Tristano - Line up. Nice work, that is a lot of notes to learn! There is one certain lick there it would be nice if you did a lesson on it, it happens at time 1:06. IT has a sort of rolling sound that stood out. I don't think I've heard anything quite like it before. It is also interesting to compare Tristano's Be Bop lines to Parker/ Gillespie Be Bop lines. I can hear some differences but don't understand them. It could be interesting to compare a Parker solo on the same song that Tristano has a solo on. I have also heard some interesting transcriptions of McCoy Tyner solos like on Passion Dance but for guitar. It can give you ideas that don't come that naturally from guitar, so it might innovate a new style for guitar. But course it's one thing to accomplish some of these transcriptions but another to apply oof it to some other song. I think that would be good for some of you future videos, to hear something like that Gingerbread lick played on a whole different song. That is like a puzzle to figure out how to make it sound good in a new place , using one lick on 3 different style songs
Check this out Roque: a 2-5-1 in C ... play over Db Maj7#5, Dbm7b5, Eb Maj7#5, F#m7b5, F#m-Maj7b5, AbMaj7#5, Bb Maj7 ... implement those chords over the chords and/or the major scale in itself ... (in-out) too, if you want to get that Wayne Shorter sonority ... Make a sequence of chord changes with those chords but improvise just with C major ... (out-in)
My pleasure! It’s a vintage model from the time al of the Ibanez models were all replicas of the Gibson models. This is likely from the 70s or 80s is hard to know because they did not use serial numbers back then. My model is a Gibson Howard Roberts replica. I’ve seen many other guitarist using Ibanez from this era. These are called pre-lawsuit era guitars because they had to stop creating replicas after Gibson sue them. The most famous guitarist I’ve seen playing one of these replicas is Mark Whitfield. Thanks for the compliment about the tone, I am also very much in love with the looks and tone of my guitar.
You can see Mark playing a different Ibanez lawsuit model here: ruclips.net/video/FX086qihDO4/видео.htmlsi=flV2PGAvYmtdZvqR I still see him sometimes playing his Ibanez on some of his IG posts
Lookout...self appointed expert here. Great in sighted lesson. Obviously some are on another level they can't be positive. Self-recognised geniuses...RUclips ahs a million of them.
Excellent video, love the content of it. Keep it up Mr Roque!!
Thanks a lot. There's more coming up soon!
Excellent tutorial!!! Matteo Mancuso is A BEAST!!! Oscar Peterson was A FORCE OF NATURE and in a class by himself!!! Miles was a master musician and a trailblazer!
Indeed they are the best of the best. I juat released an etude with these licks on my latest video that's🔥
Very helpful
@@walkercatenaccio Thanks so much!! Next year I'll post a few more
Hey great lesson! Love the examples pulled directly from the music!
Hey Nathan, thank you so much! That's the goal to do all the learning straight from the music of the greats. BTW your channel it's amazing, I am a fan.
@@roquedeschamps Thanks so much! Wish you success on this platform. Keep up the great lessons!
@@NathanBortonMusic thanks so much! I truly appreciate it!
Excellent video! Clear, well spoken, Nice Tone, tabs & notation. Love this format.
❤
Thanks, I'm glad it was helpful! There's more coming soon.
Roque, you’re a great teacher! I sometimes see this in some Pat Martino transcriptions. It sounds great, but didn’t really know how to practice it. You’ve given me some great ideas.
Thanks for the compliment! I’m glad it was helpful! All great players I’ve come across always develop their own exercises according to the things they need to get better at. Go ahead!!
Really great guitar info presented very well
Thank you kindly!
Genial Roque! exitos!
Muchas gracias!!
Great lesson!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great job!
Thanks Corey!! I really appreciate it!! Greetings! I hope everything is great back in the DR.
Great stuff, man! really concise and legit good info! Subbed for more for sure, great lesson!
Thanks a lot! There's more coming up
¡El teacher! Duro mi hermano, ¡éxito!
El pupilo! 💪🏾 Gracias mi bro!!
Great video, thanks for posting.
My pleasure!! I’m glad it was helpful to you!!
Yes you nice boy talking right stuff 😇
Thanks man! More of that right stuff is cooking!
I like the Miles lick the best and I'm not just saying that because it's Miles. It's more melodic and being on the blues helps it to work also
It's definitely the most elaborate ans it's the only one that uses the arpeggio as target + thr half-step pattern
@@roquedeschamps Wayne Shorter also does a similar chromatic in his solo, Herbie also. To be honest I think in MIles' later solos he overused that lick a bit. I also checked out your Lennie Tristano - Line up. Nice work, that is a lot of notes to learn! There is one certain lick there it would be nice if you did a lesson on it, it happens at time 1:06. IT has a sort of rolling sound that stood out. I don't think I've heard anything quite like it before. It is also interesting to compare Tristano's Be Bop lines to Parker/ Gillespie Be Bop lines. I can hear some differences but don't understand them. It could be interesting to compare a Parker solo on the same song that Tristano has a solo on.
I have also heard some interesting transcriptions of McCoy Tyner solos like on Passion Dance but for guitar. It can give you ideas that don't come that naturally from guitar, so it might innovate a new style for guitar. But course it's one thing to accomplish some of these transcriptions but another to apply oof it to some other song. I think that would be good for some of you future videos, to hear something like that Gingerbread lick played on a whole different song. That is like a puzzle to figure out how to make it sound good in a new place , using one lick on 3 different style songs
Check this out Roque: a 2-5-1 in C ... play over Db Maj7#5, Dbm7b5, Eb Maj7#5, F#m7b5, F#m-Maj7b5, AbMaj7#5, Bb Maj7 ... implement those chords over the chords and/or the major scale in itself ... (in-out)
too, if you want to get that Wayne Shorter sonority ... Make a sequence of chord changes with those chords but improvise just with C major ... (out-in)
Thanks for the suggestions!
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
🙏🏾🙏🏾
Beautiful Love ❤
One of my all-time favorites
Thanks for the fun concept! I was just wondering what model of Ibanez you're playing? Love the tone.
My pleasure! It’s a vintage model from the time al of the Ibanez models were all replicas of the Gibson models. This is likely from the 70s or 80s is hard to know because they did not use serial numbers back then. My model is a Gibson Howard Roberts replica. I’ve seen many other guitarist using Ibanez from this era. These are called pre-lawsuit era guitars because they had to stop creating replicas after Gibson sue them. The most famous guitarist I’ve seen playing one of these replicas is Mark Whitfield. Thanks for the compliment about the tone, I am also very much in love with the looks and tone of my guitar.
You can see Mark playing a different Ibanez lawsuit model here: ruclips.net/video/FX086qihDO4/видео.htmlsi=flV2PGAvYmtdZvqR
I still see him sometimes playing his Ibanez on some of his IG posts
Hi Roque I was wondering are you Dominican man? Your last name and your name is very typical of Dominican dissent.
Yes, I am Dominican. I moved to the US a few months ago. Are you Dominican too?
Yes I an. Born in NYC but parents are Dominican. I play jazz guitar and other genres too. Been doing for 25 + years.
@@anthonyalba8226 That's amazing!!
Where do you live? I live in providence RI.
@@anthonyalba8226 I live in Logan, Utah.
Sorry, nothing new here 🙄 🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️
That's the goal. Look into old stuff.
Lookout...self appointed expert here. Great in sighted lesson. Obviously some are on another level they can't be positive. Self-recognised geniuses...RUclips ahs a million of them.
This video has wisdom!!! wonderful video and definitely will be shedding.
Thank you so much!! More content for you to shred is coming up soon