exuse me, I have a nerdy question - in example 4 you write F sharp, but it seems to me that it is more correct to write G flat there. or is there no difference?
@@nuberiffic Yup, this is the correct answer. He's saying that you can just think about the arpeggios which is easier than trying to plug in several scales over changes. Just a less confusing way to connect the chords and improvise fluently. Obviously you need to understand scales, but not necessarily think about them when improvising. This is all clear in the full video. This is just a teaser...
Great video thanks.
exuse me, I have a nerdy question - in example 4 you write F sharp, but it seems to me that it is more correct to write G flat there. or is there no difference?
You bass sound s like thunder
but arpeggios come from scales
so?
Correct, however I belive he's relating to the regular TTSTTTS etc.
@@doblet664 ...he's saying you don't need scales: just arpeggios.
But you need to know those scales to understand the arpeggios
@@adsupermusone8875 what?
@@nuberiffic Yup, this is the correct answer. He's saying that you can just think about the arpeggios which is easier than trying to plug in several scales over changes. Just a less confusing way to connect the chords and improvise fluently. Obviously you need to understand scales, but not necessarily think about them when improvising. This is all clear in the full video. This is just a teaser...