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Diego Becerra
Приєднався 25 сер 2011
Some(썸)" by 정기고X소유. Sungha and Jung-Jae cover
Sungha and Jung-Jae arranged and played "Some(썸)" by 정기고X소유.
Julian Pulido and Diego Becerra cover
Julian Pulido and Diego Becerra cover
Переглядів: 267
Відео
All I DO (Stevie Wonder) cover
Переглядів 4604 роки тому
All I DO (Stevie Wonder) cover Gustavo Marler - voz Diego Becerra - guitarra
why don't you do right (cover) - ella fitzgerald & joe pass
Переглядів 2724 роки тому
why don't you do right (cover) - ella fitzgerald & joe pass Angie Sinbaqueva & Diego Becerra
Restoration - Quentin Angus
Переглядів 1114 роки тому
Alexis Sánchez- sax Jorge solanilla - bass Hugo Márquez- drum Diego Becerra - guirar Juan Acosta - piano
julian lage 233 butler
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julian lage 233 butler cover Hugo Márquez drum Alex Contreras bass Diego Becerra guirar
Canto de ossanha
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Canto de ossanha versión jonathan kreisberg adaptación batería Batería :Hugo Márques Guitarra: Diego Becerra Bogotá Combia 23/07/2019 Facultad de artes ASAB
They can't take that away from me - Kenny Burrell (Transcription pdf)
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They can't take that away from me - Kenny Burrell Transcription guitar and bass pdf www.mediafire.com/file/2938zugvy0kaak5/they_cant.pdf Diego Montenegro -guitar Hugo marquez - drum alex contreras -bass facultad de artes ASAB 20/12/2017
Quentin Angus 'Droplets' (cover)
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'Droplets' Diego becerra guitar Hugo marquez drum Jaime naranjo bass
Cheese cake - Dexter Gordon
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Alexis Sanches -Sax Diego Becerra- Guitarra Hugo Marquez - Bateria Mauricio paez -Bajo ASAB, Bogotá 09/06/2017
Body and Soul coleman hawkins
Переглядів 5027 років тому
Alexis Sanches -Sax Diego Becerra- Guitarra Hugo Marquez - Bateria Mauricio paez-Bajo ASAB, Bogotá 09/06/2017
ensayo Pé do meu Samba Caetano Veloso
Переглядів 6097 років тому
Gustavo Ahumada- vocal Diego Becerra - guitar Miguel casas bandola Sebastian Bustamante - bass Josehp Calderon - drum BOGOTÁ 16/12/2016
roxanne - the police cover
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Gustavo ahumada- vocal Juan David - piano Diego Becerra - guitar Sebastian Bustamante - bass Josehp Calderon - drum FACULTAD DE ARTES ASAB BOGOTÁ 16/12/2016
Chega de Saudade - Joao Gilberto , Antonio Carlos Jobim
Переглядів 1908 років тому
Alexis Sanches -sax Diego Becerra- guitar Hugo Marquez - drum Jaime Naranjo -bass John Riaño- piano 15/12/2016
spain chick corea
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Alexis Sanches -sax Diego Becerra- guitar Hugo Marquez - drum Jaime Naranjo -bass John Riaño- piano 15/12/2016
jonathan kreisberg canto de ossana transcription
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jonathan kreisberg canto de ossana transcription
Big Band ASAB Every Day I Have The Blues
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Big Band ASAB Every Day I Have The Blues
Big Band ASAB La Mer (beyond The Sea)
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Big Band ASAB La Mer (beyond The Sea)
jimmy bruno Harmony Chords part1 lesson
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jimmy bruno Harmony Chords part1 lesson
jimmy bruno Chord Substitutions for Common Progressions lesson
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jimmy bruno Chord Substitutions for Common Progressions lesson
He applied the objective to chords specifically, but I think he also revealed the reason to practice in the first place---to be able to move around the fretboard quickly and efficiently. You have to practice it so that it becomes second nature. Great video.
thank you, jimmy, for getting directly to the source = to use one's ear! it's very refreshing to hear you on this. i have to check for more of your clips....refreshing and welcome as a breath of fresh air. 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Well played. Very nice song!
It’s just the major scale and it’s mode positioning folks
Why doesn't he have a fingering starting on the 1 or the 4?
No
@@giovammo9738 how isn’t it? Explain which notes aren’t in the major scale, I have a hard time
What a great system to think about chords.
Jimmy says the heck with calling these what people call them. That its for arrangement for horns and scoring (drop 2 blah blah) I see he didnt do the other type with the 2 and skip 2 probably so not to overload whos learning
Hi! Where can I find the sheet music for this? This is awesome
I realize this is a very old video, but I am curious to know the chord progression Jimmy plays from 3:09
Where can I get the entire series?
what is the next step once one has learnt these five shapes in all 12 keys?
Best lesson on UA-cam. ❤
Incredible lesson. Been playing for 30 years casually and this blew my mind. Makes total sense. Thank you!
I see the copyright notice at the end. Is Jimmy getting a cut of this youtube broadcast?
What changes when the root key is a minor chord ?
Not Am can be a root in diatonic he can do II III our VI in G F our C
@@Ostin3232 Not Am ? I don't get what you're saying. Please expand a little. Thanks
i just realized im stupid
Only guitarists and basists ignore theory because is such a mess to learn because all notes are all over the place, pianists can just count alphabets in order and so on. Just play what you like and enjoy the time, same time dip your toes in theory little bit so you dont get confused. Theory helps you understand what you did and why it works or sound good + it help you to come back to that chord progression what you "jammed" without getting lost because lack of understanding.
Thanks a lot for sharing this. It helped me a lot about learning jazz guitar and these 5 shapes are the best starting points. And appreciate really for introducing me to the Jimmy Bruno.!
Thanks a million. Jimmy. Love it
Diamond
thanks for posting, learned a lot. do you know where we can get the other classroom series lessons?
My Jazz Guitar teacher would tell me every so often, after seeing me get tied up in knots over harmony and theory issues, to remember what is really important...making the sound.
You gotta be a freaking gorp if you don't like the Chinese menu.😊
The major scale, played in the 4 fret box, comprises 3 distinct patterns. One need not restrict oneself to starting from the 5th or the 6th etc on the low E string, but can pick up the repetitive pattern from any scale degree anywhere on the neck. Find your happy root note anywhere on the A string. Surrounding this root note is a rectangle of scale degrees (low E string: 4-5-6, A string: b7-1-2, D:string b3-4-5 where the - represents a skipped fret). This rectangle repeats all over the neck and skews down 1 fret at the B string (of course). Keep track of where your root notes are, see the rectangle, pick a scale degree and play your major scale picking it up from that note, across the neck, wrapping around to the other side, up the neck, down the neck, around and around, all day long.
Interesting pattern!
A major scale doesn’t have a b3 and b7. I’m not tracking
@@jonasaras What I'm describing is a rectangle of intervals, not a rectangle of the major scale. Using this rectangle, you can play any scale or mode. You need to only learn the intervals contained within that scale or mode. The rectangle makes it easy to find them.
@@theartfuldodger935 So is your set of intervals based on “dorian” as the basis (b3, b7)?
@@jonasaras No. It is based on nothing but a convenient way to visualize all of the intervals available to you when you play a scale or mode. Find the root and these intervals surround it. Stop thinking patterns and start thinking intervals that comprise a pattern. It's way more flexible and much easier. You don't want to find yourself mindlessly playing a scale when you're soloing. You want to accent chord tones and notes that impart the flavor of the mode. To do that, you have to know what intervals you're playing at all times.
Logic and the undeniable truth!
The Chinese menu thing killed me
9 minutes of vidéo : 20 years of work to do for me . This vidéo is pure gold.
How did it go from A7 to Eb7? EDIT: OH I GET IT. Tritone. OK.
still love your work!!
love your work!!
Great choice, great job!
Viva a música! Uma composição dos brasileiros gênios Vinícius e Baden, interpretada pelo americano jonathan kreisberg e transcrita pelo colombiano Diego.
I wish I knew the point of this so I could know if I'm more or less advanced than this? (Like is this just introducing people to positions on the fretboard or is this some way of narrowing things down to apply them in some way?) I've been playing "three note per string" positions on the guitar for years so I kind of know the fretboard better than this. But I don't know if this is going to be about eliminating other choices so you'll have these standard fingerings to apply to some method.
The point, in my opinion, is to gain familiarity with the collection of notes in the "C" scale in 5 positions, each beginning on a different degree of the scale. It helps liberate our ears from starting on the root, and teaches us to be comfortable starting a line anywhere on the fingerboard. Ultimately, playing intervals and patterns using these shapes will add a bunch of new ideas and allow smooth transition between keys.
This method seems very personal and restrictive if you ask me. But what do I know, this guy IS Jimmy Bruno lol
I'd like to make my practice "exercises" involve practicing these chords by using them to play standards, (not thinking of the best-sounding way to play the standard or best voice leading, just killing two birds with one stone, getting familiar with the chords and standards at the same time.) There are about a million jazz standards, and I only recognize about 10 by name, and of those I know how maybe five of them sound. Can anyone recommend what standards would be the best for practicing chords? I guess what I'm thinking is the most popular standards with the most chords so I'm moving from chord to chord a lot while learning well-known tunes. I mean I'm going to browse through the real books and iReal on my own and listen, but I'm asking if someone could narrow it down with their recommendations?
Is there more in this series?
Very impressive!
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Excellent Jimmy!! You're a fantastic teacher!! 👍🎩👍🤗
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Goodness - this is so well done. Jack
You can also illustrate the relationship of the tritone substitution (A7 -> Eb7) by flattening the 5th of A7 to get A7b5 which is the same chord as Eb7b5. You can think of the similarity of the chords by observing that they contain each other's guide tones. The 3rd and b7 of A7 is C# and G. And the 3rd and b7 of Eb7 are G and C#(Db). Then the other two notes in the chord can be thought of as optional 5th and root.
Easier: compare C7b10 to Gb13
Thanks Jimmy very educational stay well
Beautiful jimmy. Extremely clear.
Adding the right notes at the right time.
Hola Diego. Hay alguna posibilidad de conseguir las partituras de este bello arreglo?
Any reason there's no shape for the 4th note of the key?
shape 7 contains 7 and 1 shapes / shape 3 contains 3 and 4 shapes - where the half steps are in the scale
What is this lesson from?
You are a great teacher, love it, also a great player,
Excellent, bravissimo!
Bravo!
This dude contradicts himself and comes off super bitter but hes a treasure trove of musical information