Thanck you for your tuto very interessting, as I am French i dont understand all but by the way i improve my practice saxophone and also my french. For information i am 73 year old and i live réunion island. Bye
Honestly Jay you are an amazing teacher! I love the way you focus on simplicity and rhythm it’s really helped and now I’m a confident newbie! I’d like to think I’ll progress with my sax playing better as a result .. solid foundations! Also loving your other courses.. house is a mess husband is sick, kids are bored but I’m having a ball🤣🤣 x
Thanks! I had not noticed the ‘thanks’ button but it is so perfect for me. I can watch the video. I can take the lesson and not feel guilty about getting something valuable (to me) for nothing. Also, since I’m paying for it, I’m not as glib in my assessment of the lesson but will take it to my horn and work it out. Exactly what I was looking for this morning: inspiration and something to work on. Space….the final frontier….
Hi J i would like to say thank you, i have trouble reading sheet music and finding rhythm watching this video on blues improvisation has helped greatly i will be trying it. again thank i will get back to you if i improve again thanks Daz
Hi Jay. I started Playing Sax when I was around 18, and now I am 82, boy time did fly. I just want to say that, I still have a Fine memory for songs from way back in the early 1900 through the 40's and early 50's. I Still Play every day for a few Hours, and I am Still doing Gig like the Mt. Washington Hotel Main Dining Room in New Hampshire. I do find myself Playing a lot of times for People that are in their 30's and up. So you are never too old to Play the Saxophone. I have a Yanagisawa 880 Stencil made for "Martin" Ser. #00104XXX, that i have had since it was new. I love looking at your Videos on U Tube, and think you are doing a great job Teaching in this way. I will keep watching.
Something in your explanations is so methodic and appealing, that it makes me want to practice and play more. This is even though the content itself is known to me, for I've been told this kind of stuff by some good teachers over the years. Still thank you for being so clear and encouraging.
I like the Jay lessons because he is very clear while he is explaining and he has a simple and understandable way of talking for a not English speaking too. Jay doesn't forget that he is speaking to an international public and it's very important to be calm and clear in every single quote. By me (I'm a high school teacher) he is a very good teacher!
I tried this and you're right. My sound got better almost immediately. I can still use a lot of work, but This is an instantaneous leap. It's as thought the notes I play have a purpose instead of a place. Thank you for this lesson.
You pretty much blew my mind with "one note solo". I had an idea of what you were saying when you said "notiness" is a problem, but that demonstration really made me "get it". You are an amazing teacher, i have to say, and i am glad to see your UA-cam channel has grown this much.
This lesson reminds me why I have signed up for your online lessons. You cut through the smog and focus on what matters most...and you constantly remind us of the key facts to focus on!
Though french, I really enjoyed this lesson. Thanks for simple, clear, efficient tips in a "worldwide understandable" english. The "one note solo" seems to be a brilliant idea to feel rythm and space for the beginner I am.
Guilty 🙋🏽♂️ Thanks for the tips my good sir I’ve learned the biggest sin in music isn’t missing rhythm or getting wrong notes. It’s losing the feel. If you lose the feel, no amount of rhythm or notes will fix it.
Thank you for this! I might be a year and a half late, but this is so helpful. I wanna start getting better at improvising. I'm worrying too much about the notes and not the rhythm. I'll certainly download the pdf and mp3 and work on improving it in my spare time. :D
Our music academy has a jazz band. This is a lesson I've been trying to get through to them. We've been talking a lot about rhythm. We are going to watch this video in jazz band. Thanks.
I'm digging the straight forward, honest explanations. This lesson, in particular, harks to something I've experienced as a piano player, guitar player and vocalist. Too many notes can ruin good music. From personal experience, what we play should support the music, not drown it, confuse it or distract from it. This lesson contains probably the best advice I've ever seen for playing good, enjoyable music. Nice one Jay!
Hi what a great job man. i play sax baritone but the only thing is i know zero of blues I'll start to follow your videos and see how i get on. Thank for every thing i love music 😁.
This is why I signed up for your course. Pentatonic scales for blues guitar is how I learned that instrument. Now I can apply the same to sax. Thanks Jay.
JAAAAAAAY! This rocked my world! Downloaded the mp3 and improvised with the chords in the PDF. I had such a great practice session right now. Thank you thank you thank you. Been playing Sax for 2 months now...and this has boosted my confidence so much learning how to go along with the rhythm. This is the fun stuff I was looking for. Definitely gonna get the course in due time. Wasn't too crazy bout Blues...but then again...I haven't PLAYED it. So awesome. Keep goin strong man!!!
Leroy, Thank You. The blues language is used in all styles of popular music. Even if you're not into playing 'the blues" per se, this will help you play pretty much everything else...
There is a saying: Learning music is like learning a new language. So true. However, unlike when we learned our native language, we often get stuck learning only how to read music. We barely learn how to write it (composition or arranging.) Most of the time, at least in school, we never learn how to speak it. That's where improvising comes in. :) I hope that analogy makes sense. It blows students' minds out of the water when I tell them that.
Love this video. I’ve been jumping all over UA-cam to try to find things to help me with improv but I got more out of this than I did from every other video I watched.
I just took a class on introduction to lmprov, and it was good, but wha t you said and showed in about five minutes explains what I think he was trying to get across. He had me playing another instrument during the course ( college class), the violin, and i would have preferred to have played th sax; maybe he thought I wasn't ready with the sax yet.q I am going to put space an rhythm into this. I keep watching you and am learning quite a bit. I will try to keep up. I am a much much older beginner. Dan Berendt.
Hey, I’ve been playing guitar for many years, I’m also a drummer and a signer, but a beginner saxophonist, you wanted me to comment to give you feedback on the lesson here it is! It actually helped me so much, i knew the importance of rhythm before but it just clarified it all for me on sax, simplifying by choosing only select few notes forces you to be creative with them, especially in a rhythmic way, obviously I am still beginner, but that doesn’t mean I can’t sound good haha, and I enjoyed myself while doing it too so thank you. I don’t usually comment, but this time it was worthy of it
This is a great video, explaining a simple but ultimately core concept to great music...rhythm...Extremely fast playing by SOME fast players, has been a pet peeve of mine...they are all over the place but there is no ''soul'' in their playing, no ''feel'' for what they are doing. They focus on speed to the exclusion of other more important ''musical'' elements. they know millions of scales, modes note combinations that ''work'' in some way and go together but you'd end up feeling dead inside instead of inspired. Good example of inspiring music, BB King,..3 notes in the right place in the song and relative to each other could literally bring tears to your eyes. It is all in the rhythm, something i didn't consciously think about until this video. Either the person ''has it'' and 'can ''connect'' with the soul of the song rhythmically, or they dont.
Inspirational teaching. I am trying to teach my son to play an improvised chorus over some standards - I just refer him to this video on the days he won't listen (that would be most days) Keep 'em coming Jay!
Thank you for your amazing teacher! I played piano when I was young and only learnedsaxphone for 9 months back to almost 15 years ago. It took me two times to sort out the notes. But after checking the pdf scales and watched your video at the second time .I can finally hear the notes and play it.
love the idea of one note solo. In this youtube list of jump blues sax solos we get a really clear example of this in action "hand clappn"- Red Prysock. Several times the solo rides on one note with a little touch to another note only to jump back to ride that note again. All the movement is happening in the rhythm of the playing. It is not just an exercise but a real performance skill. Really great lesson here!
Oh man...just came across this and the pentatonic lick video. Been looking for a bit of inspiration as I'm working on an album and these video will help in possible melody creating. You are AWESOME!
HI Jay, I really want to buy your Better Sax Alto. I sent you an email, and no response, it says it's not available in California, Do you have any idea how I can get one? thanks..Jon
Jon the sax is available in California and we’ve already had several orders from there. Please be sure to fill out the entire checkout form as it needs to have a complete address before moving forward. I also replied to your email so perhaps check junk and spam folders.
Awesome explanation, almost cried when I achieved a three note solo
Thanck you for your tuto very interessting, as I am French i dont understand all but by the way i improve my practice saxophone and also my french.
For information i am 73 year old and i live réunion island.
Bye
Yes! This video contains the wisest advice a sax player can get. Thanks Jay.
The one note solo : achieved. Yes, I felt the rythm. Gonna try the "two notes solo" now ;-)
Good luck Stephanie !
Thanks for your insight. I always tell people the saxophone is a RHYTHM instrument.
Great lesson, couldn‘t be clearer and more motivating! Thanks a lot!
Glad to hear that!
This was great. I'm a beginner when it comes to improv. This helped a lot!!
Sonny Stitt!!... Best example ever... My second favourite sax player after Eric Marienthal... Greetings from Chile!
Honestly Jay you are an amazing teacher! I love the way you focus on simplicity and rhythm it’s really helped and now I’m a confident newbie! I’d like to think I’ll progress with my sax playing better as a result .. solid foundations! Also loving your other courses.. house is a mess husband is sick, kids are bored but I’m having a ball🤣🤣 x
Awesome lesson
Got some big takeaways from this. Improvisation is something im trying to work on. Thanks
Thanks! I had not noticed the ‘thanks’ button but it is so perfect for me. I can watch the video. I can take the lesson and not feel guilty about getting something valuable (to me) for nothing. Also, since I’m paying for it, I’m not as glib in my assessment of the lesson but will take it to my horn and work it out.
Exactly what I was looking for this morning: inspiration and something to work on. Space….the final frontier….
Good ideas and good teaching. Thanks!
Amazing Jay. Super informative. Thanks for simplifying this and making it easy to understand
Jay you are the best thank you so much God bless 🙏 ❤
Congs!! Best material on the web!
Thank you Jay! Your videos are always a great to watch
Revisited. Another gem Jay.
Hey guys start on a long 4th and throw in a few flat 3rds. Get in the groove and play with soul. Job done LoL.
Thx for your videos I get something from each video of yours. Thanks for all of your hard work
Glad you like them!
dear sir, you are a wise man! rhythm comes from the heart.
this is great less is way more with space love it
Hi J i would like to say thank you, i have trouble reading sheet music and finding rhythm watching this video on blues improvisation
has helped greatly i will be trying it. again thank i will get back to you if i improve again thanks Daz
Finally I found the best teacher alive
Hi Jay. I started Playing Sax when I was around 18, and now I am 82, boy time did fly. I just want to say that, I still have a Fine memory for songs from way back in the early 1900 through the 40's and early 50's. I Still Play every day for a few Hours, and I am Still doing Gig like the Mt. Washington Hotel Main Dining Room in New Hampshire. I do find myself Playing a lot of times for People that are in their 30's and up. So you are never too old to Play the Saxophone. I have a Yanagisawa 880 Stencil made for "Martin" Ser. #00104XXX, that i have had since it was new. I love looking at your Videos on U Tube, and think you are doing a great job Teaching in this way. I will keep watching.
Definitely this is a great chanel and you are a very good teacher. i am very excited and will be wait for new information, thanks Jay
Hi Jay the way you explaining this concepts make it so easy to understand.
A Gifted Teacher.
Something in your explanations is so methodic and appealing, that it makes me want to practice and play more. This is even though the content itself is known to me, for I've been told this kind of stuff by some good teachers over the years.
Still thank you for being so clear and encouraging.
Great.lesson. Needed this lesson to improve on confidence. Thanks
Absolutely helpful.
Thanks Mr. Jay
The one note solo is very enlightening.
I like the Jay lessons because he is very clear while he is explaining and he has a simple and understandable way of talking for a not English speaking too. Jay doesn't forget that he is speaking to an international public and it's very important to be calm and clear in every single quote. By me (I'm a high school teacher) he is a very good teacher!
This was a very insightful lesson. Thank you Jay!
A Genius teacher. Thank you to refresh my love for sax!!
Exceptionally good
Beautiful lesson !!!!!!! Thanks.
This video is one of your most important... less is more. Smiles. Thanks Jay.
You make it easy to learn.. Awesome..
Great Teacher...C Blues Scale...wow....
Thanks for the sharing lesson
That’s true the rhythm and it’s time space is important in music
I tried this and you're right. My sound got better almost immediately. I can still use a lot of work, but This is an instantaneous leap. It's as thought the notes I play have a purpose instead of a place. Thank you for this lesson.
Brennon, great to hear this from you. thanks.
Saludos Beeter exelente
Cuts through to the essentials. I have joined your course as a result
You make that look easy. 😊
The best advice I've ever learned..as Jim Neely comments "less is more"....Thanks Jay.
You pretty much blew my mind with "one note solo". I had an idea of what you were saying when you said "notiness" is a problem, but that demonstration really made me "get it". You are an amazing teacher, i have to say, and i am glad to see your UA-cam channel has grown this much.
100% true. Rhythm-time-feel are huge. Then tone. Then note choices.
Now how did I miss these lessons. Downloading the track. Unpacking my sax. One note Blues coming up. Thank you sir. Three hips and three hoorays.
This lesson reminds me why I have signed up for your online lessons. You cut through the smog and focus on what matters most...and you constantly remind us of the key facts to focus on!
Helped alot my jazz band teacher says I have to learn tenor and pplay a solo and you helped
Great lesson
Learnt alot from that. Thanks jazz man
Thats it the BEST lesson for me......
i am guitarist...
Though french, I really enjoyed this lesson. Thanks for simple, clear, efficient tips in a "worldwide understandable" english. The "one note solo" seems to be a brilliant idea to feel rythm and space for the beginner I am.
you are so right, everything you teach... thank you
Thanks, much appreciated!
You sounded so cool.
Really helpful! Thank you!
Kickass awesome video. This doesn’t just apply to saxophone.
Spot on Jay , I understand totally, Although I`m just a beginner
Guilty 🙋🏽♂️
Thanks for the tips my good sir
I’ve learned the biggest sin in music isn’t missing rhythm or getting wrong notes. It’s losing the feel. If you lose the feel, no amount of rhythm or notes will fix it.
that one note solo sounded great!
Thank you for this! I might be a year and a half late, but this is so helpful. I wanna start getting better at improvising. I'm worrying too much about the notes and not the rhythm. I'll certainly download the pdf and mp3 and work on improving it in my spare time. :D
Our music academy has a jazz band. This is a lesson I've been trying to get through to them. We've been talking a lot about rhythm. We are going to watch this video in jazz band. Thanks.
I'm digging the straight forward, honest explanations. This lesson, in particular, harks to something I've experienced as a piano player, guitar player and vocalist. Too many notes can ruin good music. From personal experience, what we play should support the music, not drown it, confuse it or distract from it. This lesson contains probably the best advice I've ever seen for playing good, enjoyable music. Nice one Jay!
Thanks !
Excellent!!! So very helpful! Great advice!
Hi what a great job man. i play sax baritone but the only thing is i know zero of blues I'll start to follow your videos and see how i get on. Thank for every thing i love music 😁.
This is why I signed up for your course. Pentatonic scales for blues guitar is how I learned that instrument. Now I can apply the same to sax. Thanks Jay.
Mike, great to hear, thanks.
Thank you for The video, it's excellent and helpfull , greetings from Argentina!!
Great, great teacher.
Thanks, I needed that...
Thank You Jay. such value in your videos. You are a godsend
JAAAAAAAY! This rocked my world! Downloaded the mp3 and improvised with the chords in the PDF. I had such a great practice session right now. Thank you thank you thank you. Been playing Sax for 2 months now...and this has boosted my confidence so much learning how to go along with the rhythm. This is the fun stuff I was looking for. Definitely gonna get the course in due time. Wasn't too crazy bout Blues...but then again...I haven't PLAYED it. So awesome. Keep goin strong man!!!
Leroy, Thank You. The blues language is used in all styles of popular music. Even if you're not into playing 'the blues" per se, this will help you play pretty much everything else...
Ditto!!
Lonnnnnngggg tones!
Thank you Sir!!!
There is a saying: Learning music is like learning a new language. So true. However, unlike when we learned our native language, we often get stuck learning only how to read music. We barely learn how to write it (composition or arranging.) Most of the time, at least in school, we never learn how to speak it. That's where improvising comes in. :) I hope that analogy makes sense. It blows students' minds out of the water when I tell them that.
Love this video. I’ve been jumping all over UA-cam to try to find things to help me with improv but I got more out of this than I did from every other video I watched.
Thanks Josh. that's great to hear.
Great. It really helps a lot.
I just took a class on introduction to lmprov, and it was good, but wha t you said and showed in about five minutes explains what I think he was trying to get across. He had me playing another instrument during the course ( college class), the violin, and i would have preferred to have played th sax; maybe he thought I wasn't ready with the sax yet.q I am going to put space an rhythm into this. I keep watching you and am learning quite a bit. I will try to keep up. I am a much much older beginner. Dan Berendt.
Hey, I’ve been playing guitar for many years, I’m also a drummer and a signer, but a beginner saxophonist, you wanted me to comment to give you feedback on the lesson here it is! It actually helped me so much, i knew the importance of rhythm before but it just clarified it all for me on sax, simplifying by choosing only select few notes forces you to be creative with them, especially in a rhythmic way, obviously I am still beginner, but that doesn’t mean I can’t sound good haha, and I enjoyed myself while doing it too so thank you.
I don’t usually comment, but this time it was worthy of it
This is a great video, explaining a simple but ultimately core concept to great music...rhythm...Extremely fast playing by SOME fast players, has been a pet peeve of mine...they are all over the place but there is no ''soul'' in their playing, no ''feel'' for what they are doing. They focus on speed to the exclusion of other more important ''musical'' elements. they know millions of scales, modes note combinations that ''work'' in some way and go together but you'd end up feeling dead inside instead of inspired. Good example of inspiring music, BB King,..3 notes in the right place in the song and relative to each other could literally bring tears to your eyes. It is all in the rhythm, something i didn't consciously think about until this video. Either the person ''has it'' and 'can ''connect'' with the soul of the song rhythmically, or they dont.
Inspirational teaching. I am trying to teach my son to play an improvised chorus over some standards - I just refer him to this video on the days he won't listen (that would be most days)
Keep 'em coming Jay!
Awesome, I hear you....thanks!
Thank you for your amazing teacher! I played piano when I was young and only learnedsaxphone for 9 months back to almost 15 years ago. It took me two times to sort out the notes. But after checking the pdf scales and watched your video at the second time .I can finally hear the notes and play it.
Amazingly useful and so well done, you're a great teacher, thank you VERY much Jay !
love the idea of one note solo. In this youtube list of jump blues sax solos we get a really clear example of this in action "hand clappn"- Red Prysock. Several times the solo rides on one note with a little touch to another note only to jump back to ride that note again. All the movement is happening in the rhythm of the playing. It is not just an exercise but a real performance skill. Really great lesson here!
David, Exactly.
Good advice. You've got a great Sound. Thanks.
Thanks Deryck!
The one note idea is spot on. I keep trying to play a lot of notes (all too fast) and get nothing out of it. This I love!!
Fantastic Classic Blue lines, good for soloists, Great video, Jay!
Thanks Wang William!
Totally agree! Thanks for sharing
Thanks Fernando!
like a Boss.. thank you 😎😎😎
oh wow, what an eye and ear opener!
Thanks Andy!
Oh man...just came across this and the pentatonic lick video. Been looking for a bit of inspiration as I'm working on an album and these video will help in possible melody creating. You are AWESOME!
HI Jay, I really want to buy your Better Sax Alto. I sent you an email, and no response, it says it's not available in California, Do you have any idea how I can get one? thanks..Jon
Jon the sax is available in California and we’ve already had several orders from there. Please be sure to fill out the entire checkout form as it needs to have a complete address before moving forward. I also replied to your email so perhaps check junk and spam folders.
ah sorry ! I finally got it , thx :)
I play guitar and found this channel on recommended. You give great ideas to practice and the way you rationalize things is motivating man
George, Cool! UA-cam is recommending my videos to guitar players! Glad you find the info helpful...
Thank you so much for lessons! It is help a lot to improve my playing!
not greatest advice, learn from this man. Sounds like he cares, got my respect,
Will buy your new blues product when it’s available. Your training package is genius!!! 🚀
It's available now !
Gold.
You are the Real! Great advices what we need.
Nice blues!
Awesome tips