What a great guy you are Sven! Thank you for making all of these videos, they have really helped me. Its also awesome to see you playing with the great joscho stephan, i wish you all the best things in your career!
I enjoy all your videos! Just wanted to add that the A7 you discuss around 5:40 I learned when introduced to Drop 2 7th chords. Perhaps your viewers would appreciate seeing the four Drop 2 inversions of various 7th chords on the middle four strings. As you know, these are very useful when creating moving bass lines. Cheers!
Really great content, just what I needed! Do you have any advice on books or further lessons of yours on these cool chord ideas? Keep up the excellent work!
Hi Sven, thank you for this fantastic lesson, as always. I wonder which is your academic background as a guitarist, and what are your current projects as a professional! Your lessons are gold, keep them up!!
Hi, I studied jazz guitar in Arnhem at Artez, right now I'm playing with a lot of great musicians, like Joscho Stephan, Fredi Gebhardt, Johann May, sometimes Stochelo Rosenberg( 😅 OK just two times) My next gig with Stochelo, like all other gigs till April 18th have been canceled because of Corona. I hope this mess will be over soon. If you are interested in music beyond gypsy jazz, I have a nice alternative Country band: JJ and the acoustic machine And soon there will be another gypsy jazz album with Fredi Gebhardt and Christoph Bormann. With Joscho Stephan I just released: Paris- Berlin. You can check out everything on Spotify I think. Warm regards, Sven
Hello , Thank You for sharing this wonderful videos.I have a "couple" of questions. I play jazz on a Gibson ES 335 and I have just started looking into Gipsy Jazz materials. I am curious about your guitars. Can you tell me more ? I have seen you with a D-hole guitar in another video. Which one do you recommend? Can I use any other acoustic guitar, i.e. my Gibson L-00 Studio for instance or my electric ? Can those gipsy guitar can be used in other music ? I heard your rendition of Libertango with fingerpicking and the sound of your guitar was nice, different but similar in some way to an acoustic flat top, maybe less sustain? Unfortunately it is impossible to find a store where you can test one of these guitars (of course now the stores are closed), so just listening on RUclips or records can't give you the feeling of playing one of these guitars. I also play double bass (mostly classical music) and I have spent months of testing on multiple instruments before buying the one I liked (and could afford). So how can you possibly buy one of these guitars without any testing ? Except for Eastman , I don't see any famous brand manufacturing those guitars , so it looks like the same situations as strings (violins, cellos , basses). You need to test it. Any suggestion? Here in the States (NY)?
Sorry for the late answer, in the states I recommend "Django books. Com and I think Altamira guitars are build in the states, too. But to learn the way of playing a normal acoustic guitar (steel string) should do in the beginning. The picks are very thick. I recommend : Killy Nonis picks Wegen Picks Manouche Picks On your electric it's also working with an old tube Amp, slightly at the edge of the sweet spot. Cheers, Sven
Hey there, concerning the notes you're right, but this ending is more like Bb major /C7/C#dim / Dm, This is what it does to your ears. In the lesson I use different bass notes. But to create the effect, you play the 6th chord of the minor scale after the dominant chord. In Am that would be after E7: F G7 and G#dim. So even though it is an inversion of Dm, it's more like Bbmajor/F 😅
@@SvenJungbeck I'll need to ask for a refund! ;P Really appreciate your videos, thank you! By the way, that chord has a C# instead of a B flat that an A7b9 would have. I'm still a bit confused... I checked it on this calculator: www.scales-chords.com/findnotes_en.php?n1=A&n2=G&n3=A%23&n4=C%23&n5=&n6= it didn't get listed as a known chord there. Sounds good though, in that context. Doesn't really need a name :)
Beautiful chord changes.
Sven Jungbeck...
You The Man!!!
😎👍🏽🎶🔥♥️🔥🎶
Lovely 😊 Thanks Sven. Masaki from Kobe
Some lovely voicings here, excellent stuff
Some lovely voicings and chord movements - thank you Sven
Another great lesson to add to my chord vocabulary.
Very useful as always. Thanks for posting.
To have you teach us all of the things you do is priceless!! This is the reason I subscribe, and watch all of your videos! Thank you!
Thank you!
Very nice video!! It was quite informative.
Can you do another video for major ballads?
Awesome teaching and uselfull tips. Thank you very much !
GREAT Sven, your videos help me a lot, not only to improve gipsy jazz knowledge. Im using a lot of your chord ideas in blues rock, ballads, etc
Great video!! Definitely going to try these ideas straight away!
What a great guy you are Sven! Thank you for making all of these videos, they have really helped me. Its also awesome to see you playing with the great joscho stephan, i wish you all the best things in your career!
Master guitarist
Sven you are such a talent and a very natural musician. Thanks for sharing your ears and knowledge!,
Another excellent Jazz / Gypsy Jazz study, thanks!
Awesome stuff Sven - very gracious of you to spend your time offering this gold your thoughts and ideas
Great video! I believe the chord at 6:04 with notes C#, G, Bb, F is: Bbm6 = Gm7b5 (Gø)
I enjoy all your videos! Just wanted to add that the A7 you discuss around 5:40 I learned when introduced to Drop 2 7th chords. Perhaps your viewers would appreciate seeing the four Drop 2 inversions of various 7th chords on the middle four strings. As you know, these are very useful when creating moving bass lines. Cheers!
You're knowledge is amazing, thank you very much for these voicings, they sound fantastic.
like very muche your clear way ... keep goin!!!
Chord study is crazy, if you put the fifth in the base a Bbmaj7 becomes an F6. An Fm6 with the 6th in the base is a Dm7b5. My head spins!
Really great content, just what I needed! Do you have any advice on books or further lessons of yours on these cool chord ideas? Keep up the excellent work!
@@jazzguitarjunk9578 check out my lessons material here:
payhip.com/SvenJungbeck
There is diagrams, solo tabs and chord melodies.
thank you so much for this
Thanks for those amazing chords
These are great Sven. Any nice voicing ideas for major endings for ballads?
Hi Sven, thank you for this fantastic lesson, as always.
I wonder which is your academic background as a guitarist, and what are your current projects as a professional!
Your lessons are gold, keep them up!!
Hi,
I studied jazz guitar in Arnhem at Artez, right now I'm playing with a lot of great musicians, like Joscho Stephan, Fredi Gebhardt, Johann May, sometimes Stochelo Rosenberg( 😅 OK just two times)
My next gig with Stochelo, like all other gigs till April 18th have been canceled because of Corona. I hope this mess will be over soon.
If you are interested in music beyond gypsy jazz, I have a nice alternative Country band: JJ and the acoustic machine
And soon there will be another gypsy jazz album with Fredi Gebhardt and Christoph Bormann.
With Joscho Stephan I just released: Paris- Berlin.
You can check out everything on Spotify I think.
Warm regards, Sven
Hello , Thank You for sharing this wonderful videos.I have a "couple" of questions. I play jazz on a Gibson ES 335 and I have just started looking into Gipsy Jazz materials. I am curious about your guitars. Can you tell me more ? I have seen you with a D-hole guitar in another video. Which one do you recommend? Can I use any other acoustic guitar, i.e. my Gibson L-00 Studio for instance or my electric ? Can those gipsy guitar can be used in other music ? I heard your rendition of Libertango with fingerpicking and the sound of your guitar was nice, different but similar in some way to an acoustic flat top, maybe less sustain? Unfortunately it is impossible to find a store where you can test one of these guitars (of course now the stores are closed), so just listening on RUclips or records can't give you the feeling of playing one of these guitars. I also play double bass (mostly classical music) and I have spent months of testing on multiple instruments before buying the one I liked (and could afford). So how can you possibly buy one of these guitars without any testing ? Except for Eastman , I don't see any famous brand manufacturing those guitars , so it looks like the same situations as strings (violins, cellos , basses). You need to test it. Any suggestion? Here in the States (NY)?
Sorry for the late answer, in the states I recommend "Django books. Com and I think Altamira guitars are build in the states, too.
But to learn the way of playing a normal acoustic guitar (steel string) should do in the beginning. The picks are very thick.
I recommend :
Killy Nonis picks
Wegen Picks
Manouche Picks
On your electric it's also working with an old tube Amp, slightly at the edge of the sweet spot.
Cheers,
Sven
How would you run these over a major progression?
tell us about your guitars when u do this lessons.,.....
Would we find the same chords in figured bass rendition in the Baroque era?
Absolutely!
Was ist das für eine oval-hole Gypsygitarre? Sieht toll aus und klingt gut. Cheers Roger 🇨🇭
is that nylon or steel/brass strings?
Steel!
Sven, 0:51 it's just Dminor. Make it simple. How would You call it with F on the 1st string? Anyway, great lesson!
Hey there, concerning the notes you're right, but this ending is more like Bb major /C7/C#dim / Dm,
This is what it does to your ears.
In the lesson I use different bass notes. But to create the effect, you play the 6th chord of the minor scale after the dominant chord. In Am that would be after E7:
F G7 and G#dim.
So even though it is an inversion of Dm, it's more like Bbmajor/F 😅
hi sven! you're great! can you do out of nowhere?
Just recorded that one, yes I can make a tutorial!
2:12 - That's not a E7b9 chord.
Yes, A7b9, very sorry. Language mistake, sometimes I mix it up in English
@@SvenJungbeck I'll need to ask for a refund!
;P
Really appreciate your videos, thank you!
By the way, that chord has a C# instead of a B flat that an A7b9 would have. I'm still a bit confused... I checked it on this calculator: www.scales-chords.com/findnotes_en.php?n1=A&n2=G&n3=A%23&n4=C%23&n5=&n6=
it didn't get listed as a known chord there. Sounds good though, in that context. Doesn't really need a name :)
H
pimp your ballads? really? don't listen to them sven....
What do you mean? The click bait title?