This video is so far above where I'm at, but I love it. Beginning to get into learning how to recognize intervals for the first time, and I was never into music as a kid. 32 now, started guitar 3 years ago and piano one year ago. Between your channel and a few others I'm beginning to get a much better picture of this thing.
This is great. The "thinking out loud" style of teaching is REALLY impactful. This is the first video I've seen of yours and I hope there are more like this. Diving in now! Thx!
Brent, I completely agree with your approach: 1) Listen to the bass to identify the root note of the chord. 2) Determine if the base chord is major or minor 3) Identify the notes comprising the quality or color of the chord. It's this third step you're consistently getting wrong; my guess is that your truly excellent grasp of theory is causing you to make assumptions that over-power what your ears are trying to tell you. Here are two more examples: - Measure 5's key quality/color note on top is clearly a high D; not part of an Am7(b5). Try an F13 (maybe without the F) here. - And finally, the last chord: The two very distinct color notes on top are Eb and Ab which have nothing to do with G7. Abmin is a lot closer to the keyboard's voicing than G7. Then the wonderful Db-D walk up back to Cm7. I don't know jazz, and I didn't know this song before watching the video, so I only had my ears to rely on.
Thanks Barbara! It's something that takes practice, and sometimes it's a matter of using some of those other skills I was mentioning to fill in the blanks.
Are you listening on a device with a microphone the size of a pea by any chance, like a phone or a computer? That totally kills the base and that might be the problem.
You need to sing a lot of chord changes (in standard jazz) and take your time to internalize the colours. You should sing and sing (the bass) trust me and be patience, you'll see the resoult at the end.
I find that hearing and knowing the bass notes was easy for me but hearing the full chord quality in the piano voicings was really difficult for me. Particularly on the EbM7 in the fourth bar. I heard the root in the bass but couldn't be totally sure what chord the piano was playing. Thanks for this video. Much appreciated.
Thank you so much! My stage of learning is ready for your direction of teaching here, so it is an eye opener, but at least I can understand what you are saying. I am presently coincidentally studying Autumn Leaves, so it applies there too. Trouble is , that you have said enough in one video, to make me disappear into the study room for a long time!!
Glad you found it helpful Stuart! Simply take one little thing in this video and put it to work, forgetting the rest. Get that one thing, and then move on to something else that you think will help you in your playing right now.
@@kenmorley2339 I'm actually a bluegrasser; you know, I-IV-I-V with maybe a vi occasionally thrown in. I like Brent's style; he just needs to ... "proof-read" his vids a bit before posting.
I use this method to extemporaneously reconstruct and/or approximate the chord progressions on the fly by using the following four steps (combined with your personal memory/familiarity with each song): 1. The last root note of the basic chord (not inverted chords) of a song is almost always the same note (+1 or more octaves below) as the final note of the song/melody (or final note of the opening stanza/verse). 2. When the melody progresses upward or downward chromatically, the root note of the basic chord is often 3 note intervals below (+1 octave) the melodic notes played on the main down beat (or sometimes immediately after the main down beat if the down beat melodic note is just a passing note). 3. Otherwise, the root note of the basic chord is either 1, 3, or 5 note intervals BELOW the melodic notes played on the main down beats (or immediately after the main down beat). Try playing some traditional Christmas carols on piano in the key of C to easily confirm this simple correspondence between melodic and root notes. 4. Form the chords by playing the root note with left hand pinky along with the notes at 5, 8, and 10 note intervals above the root note by holding your left hand in a fixed claw position. Use these four steps to identify the chords to play with any given song melody (if you’re playing the piano) by simply and literally watching for the melodic notes played on the right hand on the main down beats - a process I’ve come to call “playing by sight” as opposed to “playing be ear”. If you’re not playing the melody and just playing the chords, you’ll need to “play by ear” by identifying the melodic notes as you sing the melody in your head using the solfege (do-re-me) method and apply the steps above to identify the root notes and chords.
Hey Rodrigo! What I meant was you can easily use your instrument to identify what the root note is that you are hearing. I was just able to deduce the note name by having a relative pitch note. Though sometimes I'm off by a half-step, so not so super after all ;)
In the most simplistic way lol I can put it as "Identifying a song by hearing it." or "when you tell yourself 'this sounds like Baby One More Time'"; Identifying chord progressions is just a more profound form of that.
Definitely and eye opener. Only until the last part when Brent disclosed that it was Autumn Leaves did I recognize that. I do need consistent ear training. Love the video.
That's great! Because if you can recognize those changes, you can recognize major and minor ii-V-I's, and if you can recognize those you are well on your way to hearing chord progressions in jazz standards by ear.
Nice. It would have been interesting if this was from the stand point of functional notation (either Roman numerals or Nashville) so that one does not have to worry about grabbing an instrument to find the reference pitch, or have an internalized pitch to guess from.
Very interesting, I'm always trying to start with the first chord, and then to move along. However, sometimes is faster on the fly to recognize some other typical patterns like 4th or 5th from any chord, or some minor/major 3rd from any chord etc. Without any instrument, this is quite a challenge.
alright. i'll stop watching so i don't know the cadences of autumn leaves before i learn it myself. i'll do it tomorrow! so excited to start learning by ear and avoiding lead sheets
Anyone dissapointed that they don't have as good of an ear as this guy should know that he just used Autumn Leaves (easily one of the most well known progressions among jazz musicians) and pretended to figure it out from scratch. The thought process, recognizing intervals and cadences etc is valid but he's not really figuring it out in this case, he obviously could write out the autumn leaves chords without listening.
Hi Brent, nice one. Can you let us know the software(or any other convenient ones that might serve the purpose) you were using in the video for typing the chords? Thanks
Hi Brent, I don't comment often but this is excellent and exactly what I needed at the moment, thanks a lot for putting this out there!! Will keep working on it though it can be hard and frustrating at times, but I know it takes loooots of practice to reach your level... Since I don't play a comping instrument, it might be harder as well. Would you say getting a keyboard to work on ear training can help the process? Thanks again and long live LJS!
So glad to help! Indeed it does take some work, but as I mentioned, the more you do this stuff the more second nature it gets. Each time you do it you level up. I don't think you need a keyboard, though it never hurts. A lot of the fundamentals can be practiced with any instrument or just using your voice.
Thanks for the answer, Brent. Do you mind another question? How do you deal with walking bass lines, since they go fast and sometimes land on other guide tones or passing notes (i.e not the root) whilst the comping might just be soft in the background and hard to hear? Thanks! (big fan of your podcasts btw)
Hi ! as you mentioned , your friend Aimee Nolte shared this technique for finding your own relative note. i`ve tried this and encountered a problem - i have some songs that i`m comfortable singing and which i know the starting notes for sure. but this works when i start singing these notes "out of nowhere" - without previously listening to anything for at least 2-3 hours, but if theres some tune playing on the radio, or i play a tune myself, then these starting notes kind of slide into the key of that tune)) i dont know what to do to keep them where they belong))
Hey Tim! I totally get you. I think having your instrument to help guide you will aid in this. And let's not forget, it's okay to check on some sheet music as well.
Old video. But this 'relative pitch note' you mentioned (which rather is something quite absolute, right? ) , could you eloborate on this? How do I get to know if I have one too? Maybe everyone has it, like 'relax your vocal chords and just breathe out' or something?
@@BluePixelvideos sorry, thats not the topic. If you have relative pitch (which I have more or less) you would just need one note, that is absolute to reference to it, which gives you a kind of absolute pitch.
Do I need to practice ear training with chords first? I’m doing the same thing as this but with Cannonballs recording, and I’m able to hear the bass notes but when it comes to piano voicing I’m completely lost
Interesting and informative video. I have a question. You said that you may have heard a #11 on the D7 chord and think I heard it too and I was thinking that the #11 in this chord was the D. That's why I thought it was an Ab7#11. But then you said that the bass was playing D and I heard it too. So I wanted to ask if it's possible for the bass to be playing the #11 in a sub chord? To my knowledge it is highly unlikely, but does it happen sometimes?
Hi Alex! Thanks for the question. I agree that it would be less likely, because the Tritone sub is Ab7, and if you make it a #11 the only real difference is the bass note. So I think typically a bass player would represent that chromatic downward bass movement. That being said, bass players can and will start on different notes other than the root. That's the beauty of Tritone subs. You probably thought it was Ab at first because the #11 you were hearing on the D is Ab.
@@Learnjazzstandards I like the sound D7b9 (played as D-F#-C-Eb-A) but briefly sharpening that A to A# and quickly falling back to the A before going to the Gm7. It echoes the melody quite nicely.
I'm confused about transposing the chords from piano to Eb alto saxophone. I know, there is 1,5 sound difference. But what should be the reference instrument for alto player. While listening should I identify progressions for my Eb instrument, or from piano C and than transpose to Eb ?
what can i train to hear jacob colliers vocal harmony. tryingto understand what hes doing it so i can internalize it and apply it has pretty much been my dream since starting music. it seems such a simple concept, explore the sounds you like, but ive had countless struggles and its quite demoralizing. Anyone with suggestions?
Do you recommend using solfege while interval and chord practice? Or just call by its degree( major 3rd, minor7th). Please reply. I'm a self taught person. Really struggling with ear training
I have a question. So I’m perfect pitch since pretty young but I struggle to figure out the bass note or bottom ones cause I hear the notes of the higher ones and it like disturb me trying to find the base( it’s kinda like hearing ppl talk loudly over the one ur trying to talk with?} Is there a way to Improve hearing the bass?🥺 I also don’t know chords that much , I just hear notes? But the bass one always give problem.
I don't understand why you took F7 at 11:30. After C bass line, aren't you hearing G note in the bass. What makes you chose F instead of G there besides knowing the fact that 2-5-1 is very common?
You state very confidetntly that the second chord you figure out at the entrance to bar 7 is Gm7.... except it's not. I agree, the base chord is Gm, but the main note that adds the "quality" is not "F" which would've made it a Gm7, but "A". I actually hear no "F" at all which would've made it a Gm9 (Gm, add F and A), so I'd call the chord a Gm add9. We can quibble whether it's Gm9 or Gm/9, but it's certainly not Gm7. Matter of fact, the keyboard plays TWO "A"s at octaves emphasizing the very distinct voicing of a minor ninth. Very surprised you didn't hear this...
Could anyone suggest something I can do to improve? when im humming the bass note of a song and try playing it on my instrument I think I found it since my humming seems to be synchronizing with the note but it turns out its a whole different note completely. i've been at this for a long time and i've been having the same problem. i'm beginning to think im slightly tone deaf or something
Pretty standard list. Thumbs up. Couple of issues. Giant Steps is great, but I don’t know if GS is that influential or important to Modern Jazz as Love Supreme, Village Vanguard, or Ascension. Then nothing over the next 50 years that & yes controversial: Rosenwinkle’s DS? KR, Brad M, & Redman, scream mediocrity! Anyway, no CT Silent Tongues or Berlin? Evan Parker? Brotzmann? Braxton CMO76? AEC FullForce/NiceGuys? But Kurt Rosenwinkle?
Sorry to chime in again, but I continued listening: you got the first chord in the second measure wrong as well. The base chord is correct, Fmaj but again, you get the color notes that add the chord quality wrong. Listen carefully to the keyboard chord following the bass's "F"; there's no Eb, the dominant 7 in F, so it can't be F7. But there is a D and a G making the chord an F6add9... very jazzy. The most prominent note on the keyboard for this chord is G, the nine note for F.
That is a good point. I wonder what his internal process for identifying this progression really was. There were too many instances where the piano voicings were implying a chord quality, but not actually playing the notes (distracting!). For example: The Bbmaj7 voicing. All I heard was CDF . There is no Maj7 interval to identify. When it then moved to the Eb in the bass the piano played the same CDF voicing. The Gm7 chord, the piano appears to play FGA to a GAC with a G played by the bass. There is no Bb in the voicing, the minor 3rd is left out. And the defining note in the last voicing (G7) was an Ab All that long windiness is only to point out that identifying the quality of the chords from the intervals in the voicings can be a great distraction. Yet he was able to identify the chord progression easily. I think it boils down to already knowing what a ii-V-1 sounds like and then you can confirm that is what you are hearing when you come across one Mentally recalling what they sound like is pretty easy.
all this is so sharp and so relevant! wonderful
This video is so far above where I'm at, but I love it. Beginning to get into learning how to recognize intervals for the first time, and I was never into music as a kid. 32 now, started guitar 3 years ago and piano one year ago. Between your channel and a few others I'm beginning to get a much better picture of this thing.
31 and 3 years in here too lol. Hearing intervals is such a game changer 👍
@@josephwilkinson3416 congrats! Most people I know think they're too old to learn something new....and they're like 30-35 LOL
This is great. The "thinking out loud" style of teaching is REALLY impactful. This is the first video I've seen of yours and I hope there are more like this. Diving in now! Thx!
Brent, I completely agree with your approach: 1) Listen to the bass to identify the root note of the chord. 2) Determine if the base chord is major or minor 3) Identify the notes comprising the quality or color of the chord. It's this third step you're consistently getting wrong; my guess is that your truly excellent grasp of theory is causing you to make assumptions that over-power what your ears are trying to tell you.
Here are two more examples:
- Measure 5's key quality/color note on top is clearly a high D; not part of an Am7(b5). Try an F13 (maybe without the F) here.
- And finally, the last chord: The two very distinct color notes on top are Eb and Ab which have nothing to do with G7. Abmin is a lot closer to the keyboard's voicing than G7. Then the wonderful Db-D walk up back to Cm7.
I don't know jazz, and I didn't know this song before watching the video, so I only had my ears to rely on.
The explanation is very clear. My only difficulty was hearing the base notes
Thanks Barbara! It's something that takes practice, and sometimes it's a matter of using some of those other skills I was mentioning to fill in the blanks.
Are you listening on a device with a microphone the size of a pea by any chance, like a phone or a computer? That totally kills the base and that might be the problem.
you need a good pair of headphones, audio tecnica, senheiser, 80$ +
You need to sing a lot of chord changes (in standard jazz) and take your time to internalize the colours. You should sing and sing (the bass) trust me and be patience, you'll see the resoult at the end.
It's called Bass not base... :( Davie504 would not be proud
I find that hearing and knowing the bass notes was easy for me but hearing the full chord quality in the piano voicings was really difficult for me. Particularly on the EbM7 in the fourth bar. I heard the root in the bass but couldn't be totally sure what chord the piano was playing. Thanks for this video. Much appreciated.
Thank you so much! My stage of learning is ready for your direction of teaching here, so it is an eye opener, but at least I can understand what you are saying. I am presently coincidentally studying Autumn Leaves, so it applies there too. Trouble is , that you have said enough in one video, to make me disappear into the study room for a long time!!
Glad you found it helpful Stuart! Simply take one little thing in this video and put it to work, forgetting the rest. Get that one thing, and then move on to something else that you think will help you in your playing right now.
Only witnessed how good you are at listening to chord progression. I dont really "learn" how to do it🙃
"i don't know what chord progressions will be..."
*plays Autumn Leaves*
That's what i thought too lol.
Lol
I was like this is a good challenge for me and then it came for the first time and nevermind.
No , no dont kick a man when he is down . George Claborn has just shot the chord sequence to pieces .
@@kenmorley2339 I'm actually a bluegrasser; you know, I-IV-I-V with maybe a vi occasionally thrown in. I like Brent's style; he just needs to ... "proof-read" his vids a bit before posting.
Great lesson in ear training and Jazz theory. Thanks. Will be listening more to you.
Tara Adcock thanks! Glad you found it helpful
This is the simplest progression to teach with regards to Jazz!!
But might help a beginner in Jazz!!
this is talent!!
I use this method to extemporaneously reconstruct and/or approximate the chord progressions on the fly by using the following four steps (combined with your personal memory/familiarity with each song):
1. The last root note of the basic chord (not inverted chords) of a song is almost always the same note (+1 or more octaves below) as the final note of the song/melody (or final note of the opening stanza/verse).
2. When the melody progresses upward or downward chromatically, the root note of the basic chord is often 3 note intervals below (+1 octave) the melodic notes played on the main down beat (or sometimes immediately after the main down beat if the down beat melodic note is just a passing note).
3. Otherwise, the root note of the basic chord is either 1, 3, or 5 note intervals BELOW the melodic notes played on the main down beats (or immediately after the main down beat). Try playing some traditional Christmas carols on piano in the key of C to easily confirm this simple correspondence between melodic and root notes.
4. Form the chords by playing the root note with left hand pinky along with the notes at 5, 8, and 10 note intervals above the root note by holding your left hand in a fixed claw position.
Use these four steps to identify the chords to play with any given song melody (if you’re playing the piano) by simply and literally watching for the melodic notes played on the right hand on the main down beats - a process I’ve come to call “playing by sight” as opposed to “playing be ear”.
If you’re not playing the melody and just playing the chords, you’ll need to “play by ear” by identifying the melodic notes as you sing the melody in your head using the solfege (do-re-me) method and apply the steps above to identify the root notes and chords.
Thanks for sharing your method Allan!
I really got a lot out of this video, thank you very much for sharing your approach Brent!
You're a fantastic teacher. Thank you💜🎸
Thank you!
"you don't have to have any super skills with relative pitch"
Say's the guy who have super skills with relative pitch.
LOL
Hey Rodrigo! What I meant was you can easily use your instrument to identify what the root note is that you are hearing. I was just able to deduce the note name by having a relative pitch note. Though sometimes I'm off by a half-step, so not so super after all ;)
In the most simplistic way lol I can put it as "Identifying a song by hearing it." or "when you tell yourself 'this sounds like Baby One More Time'"; Identifying chord progressions is just a more profound form of that.
I nailed it!! Exact changes you came up with! First time trying this exercise Awesome video!
.
Definitely and eye opener. Only until the last part when Brent disclosed that it was Autumn Leaves did I recognize that. I do need consistent ear training. Love the video.
Hey, that's no problem! It takes learning a lot of tunes before this stuff becomes second nature.
excellent technique. great video
I just heard Autmn leaves -ish when you played the track at first and knew the chords when you said the Bb
Me every time hearing people humming a note out
“ I KNOW, THAT’s A C”
Thanks Brent. I will have to go back to the podcast on intervals and become familiar with them.
My pleasure, Alfred! Intervals are definitely worth spending some time on as you can see.
Perfect timing. Just what I'd got the courage up to do next: learning the harmony of key standards by ear. Many thanks!
Glad you found it helpful Douglas!
Thank you so much great!
Glad it was helpful!
great stuff! thank you very much!
My pleasure Ariel!
Thank you for this video! I was wonddering if you could provide the link to the aime Noltee podcast please?
When it started playing I could only think that it sounds like Autumn leaves
That's great! Because if you can recognize those changes, you can recognize major and minor ii-V-I's, and if you can recognize those you are well on your way to hearing chord progressions in jazz standards by ear.
@@Learnjazzstandards Thanks!
That was nice! A lot of hearing work to do for now...
Right on, Wim!
Hello! Do you know how to train the ear in order to hear a lot of notes played simultaneously?
Good teaching. This was way the h*** above my capability. Probably should run off and learn all the chords on my electric piano.
Nice. It would have been interesting if this was from the stand point of functional notation (either Roman numerals or Nashville) so that one does not have to worry about grabbing an instrument to find the reference pitch, or have an internalized pitch to guess from.
Very interesting, I'm always trying to start with the first chord, and then to move along. However, sometimes is faster on the fly to recognize some other typical patterns like 4th or 5th from any chord, or some minor/major 3rd from any chord etc. Without any instrument, this is quite a challenge.
alright. i'll stop watching so i don't know the cadences of autumn leaves before i learn it myself. i'll do it tomorrow! so excited to start learning by ear and avoiding lead sheets
Anyone dissapointed that they don't have as good of an ear as this guy should know that he just used Autumn Leaves (easily one of the most well known progressions among jazz musicians) and pretended to figure it out from scratch. The thought process, recognizing intervals and cadences etc is valid but he's not really figuring it out in this case, he obviously could write out the autumn leaves chords without listening.
wonderful!
Many thanks!
i can hear melody, not the progression, you got me in less than a minute in. nice video.
Hi Brent, nice one. Can you let us know the software(or any other convenient ones that might serve the purpose) you were using in the video for typing the chords? Thanks
Hey Alvin, no problem! For examples sake, I was using Band-in-a-Box: www.learnjazzstandards.com/band-in-a-box/
Hi Brent, I don't comment often but this is excellent and exactly what I needed at the moment, thanks a lot for putting this out there!! Will keep working on it though it can be hard and frustrating at times, but I know it takes loooots of practice to reach your level... Since I don't play a comping instrument, it might be harder as well. Would you say getting a keyboard to work on ear training can help the process? Thanks again and long live LJS!
So glad to help! Indeed it does take some work, but as I mentioned, the more you do this stuff the more second nature it gets. Each time you do it you level up. I don't think you need a keyboard, though it never hurts. A lot of the fundamentals can be practiced with any instrument or just using your voice.
Thanks for the answer, Brent. Do you mind another question? How do you deal with walking bass lines, since they go fast and sometimes land on other guide tones or passing notes (i.e not the root) whilst the comping might just be soft in the background and hard to hear? Thanks! (big fan of your podcasts btw)
i heard Cm7, cdim7 then BbM7
very helpful
Hi ! as you mentioned , your friend Aimee Nolte shared this technique for finding your own relative note. i`ve tried this and encountered a problem - i have some songs that i`m comfortable singing and which i know the starting notes for sure. but this works when i start singing these notes "out of nowhere" - without previously listening to anything for at least 2-3 hours, but if theres some tune playing on the radio, or i play a tune myself, then these starting notes kind of slide into the key of that tune)) i dont know what to do to keep them where they belong))
Hey Tim! I totally get you. I think having your instrument to help guide you will aid in this. And let's not forget, it's okay to check on some sheet music as well.
Old video. But this 'relative pitch note' you mentioned (which rather is something quite absolute, right? ) , could you eloborate on this? How do I get to know if I have one too? Maybe everyone has it, like 'relax your vocal chords and just breathe out' or something?
ua-cam.com/video/uNRsQl6nw-A/v-deo.html
@@BluePixelvideos sorry, thats not the topic. If you have relative pitch (which I have more or less) you would just need one note, that is absolute to reference to it, which gives you a kind of absolute pitch.
Rock on
Funny, I've always been the other way around--I can pick up the chords quickly but struggle with the melody.
Moral of story: sear the sound of ii-V-I into your brain, then go out and identify chord progressions
I'd have to agree!
Do I need to practice ear training with chords first? I’m doing the same thing as this but with Cannonballs recording, and I’m able to hear the bass notes but when it comes to piano voicing I’m completely lost
Interesting and informative video. I have a question. You said that you may have heard a #11 on the D7 chord and think I heard it too and I was thinking that the #11 in this chord was the D. That's why I thought it was an Ab7#11. But then you said that the bass was playing D and I heard it too. So I wanted to ask if it's possible for the bass to be playing the #11 in a sub chord? To my knowledge it is highly unlikely, but does it happen sometimes?
Hi Alex! Thanks for the question. I agree that it would be less likely, because the Tritone sub is Ab7, and if you make it a #11 the only real difference is the bass note. So I think typically a bass player would represent that chromatic downward bass movement. That being said, bass players can and will start on different notes other than the root. That's the beauty of Tritone subs. You probably thought it was Ab at first because the #11 you were hearing on the D is Ab.
@@Learnjazzstandards probably, yes hahaha thanks for the response :))
@@Learnjazzstandards I like the sound D7b9 (played as D-F#-C-Eb-A) but briefly sharpening that A to A# and quickly falling back to the A before going to the Gm7. It echoes the melody quite nicely.
I'm confused about transposing the chords from piano to Eb alto saxophone. I know, there is 1,5 sound difference. But what should be the reference instrument for alto player. While listening should I identify progressions for my Eb instrument, or from piano C and than transpose to Eb ?
7:10 no link to Aimee Nolte
See suggestion
what software is he using to enter the chord sheet ?
ok, but there are also inversions of chord? how to recognize them?
The really really sad part about this is that I already know all of this, I just don’t practice enough
It's all good Villiam! But you're right on the spot. You can know a lot of stuff, but without action, there won't be the desired results
Excelente
Thanks!
what can i train to hear jacob colliers vocal harmony. tryingto understand what hes doing it so i can internalize it and apply it has pretty much been my dream since starting music. it seems such a simple concept, explore the sounds you like, but ive had countless struggles and its quite demoralizing. Anyone with suggestions?
Do you recommend using solfege while interval and chord practice? Or just call by its degree( major 3rd, minor7th). Please reply. I'm a self taught person. Really struggling with ear training
You may use the degrees. We have a course that will help you with ear training:
www.learnjazzstandards.com/play-hear-sales-page/
great!
Thanks for watching Pat!
I have a question. So I’m perfect pitch since pretty young but I struggle to figure out the bass note or bottom ones cause I hear the notes of the higher ones and it like disturb me trying to find the base( it’s kinda like hearing ppl talk loudly over the one ur trying to talk with?} Is there a way to Improve hearing the bass?🥺 I also don’t know chords that much , I just hear notes? But the bass one always give problem.
I don't understand why you took F7 at 11:30. After C bass line, aren't you hearing G note in the bass. What makes you chose F instead of G there besides knowing the fact that 2-5-1 is very common?
You state very confidetntly that the second chord you figure out at the entrance to bar 7 is Gm7.... except it's not. I agree, the base chord is Gm, but the main note that adds the "quality" is not "F" which would've made it a Gm7, but "A". I actually hear no "F" at all which would've made it a Gm9 (Gm, add F and A), so I'd call the chord a Gm add9. We can quibble whether it's Gm9 or Gm/9, but it's certainly not Gm7. Matter of fact, the keyboard plays TWO "A"s at octaves emphasizing the very distinct voicing of a minor ninth. Very surprised you didn't hear this...
Could anyone suggest something I can do to improve? when im humming the bass note of a song and try playing it on my instrument I think I found it since my humming seems to be synchronizing with the note but it turns out its a whole different note completely. i've been at this for a long time and i've been having the same problem. i'm beginning to think im slightly tone deaf or something
Pretty standard list. Thumbs up. Couple of issues. Giant Steps is great, but I don’t know if GS is that influential or important to Modern Jazz as Love Supreme, Village Vanguard, or Ascension. Then nothing over the next 50 years that & yes controversial: Rosenwinkle’s DS? KR, Brad M, & Redman, scream mediocrity! Anyway, no CT Silent Tongues or Berlin? Evan Parker? Brotzmann? Braxton CMO76? AEC FullForce/NiceGuys? But Kurt Rosenwinkle?
Sorry to chime in again, but I continued listening: you got the first chord in the second measure wrong as well. The base chord is correct, Fmaj but again, you get the color notes that add the chord quality wrong. Listen carefully to the keyboard chord following the bass's "F"; there's no Eb, the dominant 7 in F, so it can't be F7. But there is a D and a G making the chord an F6add9... very jazzy. The most prominent note on the keyboard for this chord is G, the nine note for F.
Very useful….
Glad to hear that. Thanks!
"Now, I have a 'suspicion' that the Bb chord is the tonic" NOOOO I WANT TO KNOW WHY YOU HAVE THAT SUSPICION, HOW DO YOU KNOW THAT
what programm?
I'm hearing dm7/G on the 7th bar??
Brent's right that the root note there is G making the root chord Gm, but the color note(s) are A, so I'd say Gm add9.
For some wierd reason I heard a diminished chord in the last bar
You can build a diminished chord off of the 3rd of the Dom7b9. (G)BDFAb B diminished off of G7b9
I cannot hear the major 7 in 6:19
Should I be trying to ignore the piano punch accents? I found them very distracting!
That is a good point. I wonder what his internal process for identifying this progression really was. There were too many instances where the piano voicings were implying a chord quality, but not actually playing the notes (distracting!). For example:
The Bbmaj7 voicing. All I heard was CDF . There is no Maj7 interval to identify.
When it then moved to the Eb in the bass the piano played the same CDF voicing.
The Gm7 chord, the piano appears to play FGA to a GAC with a G played by the bass. There is no Bb in the voicing, the minor 3rd is left out.
And the defining note in the last voicing (G7) was an Ab
All that long windiness is only to point out that identifying the quality of the chords from the intervals in the voicings can be a great distraction.
Yet he was able to identify the chord progression easily.
I think it boils down to already knowing what a ii-V-1 sounds like and then you can confirm that is what you are hearing when you come across one
Mentally recalling what they sound like is pretty easy.
👍
Hearing by ear
You don't have to do any of this work if you just know it's Autumn Leaves. ;)
4:11
4:13 mfw the music starts 👁️👄👁️
I have a lot of work to do. LOL
ll v l..................................minor or major..........
Instead of the whole video, you could've just told to Practice