@@alejandrom.4680 If a 51 year old man can master it in 20 years, you 15 year old teen too can master it in 02 years. When it come to music the early age is a bless. Hope you will play great in future. :-)
Actually, if you actually cared to learn it. And spent about an hour a day on it. It'd be pretty possible to learn this in a year. Yes to MASTER it, it might take quite a bit of time. But this isn't impossible to understand and it just depends on how often you practice
As a metalhead at heart open to all kinds of music, this was fascinating and so clearly explained. That minor 2-5-1 with the C minor-major 7 @14:50 in context actually made my jaw drop. So hauntingly beautiful. I know very little about music theory but this makes me want to learn.
So you learn the 2-5-1 the most easy and is a rudiments and you have a lot more progression, you get that but what happened with the others is so much to learn this is just to make you feel better, like you learn a lot of you really want to learn believe me you will need years to learn not just 20 minutes!
Thank you so much. I've played "by ear" or rather "self taught" over the years but always thought jazz would be almost impossible for me to learn. By watching this video a light is coming to my mind and started to believe and embrace a new level for me to play, jazz. Thank you, Mr. Julian Bradley.
This is the absolute best music theory instruction video I've seen on UA-cam. Other videos I've researched on this stuff vary from confusing to - confusing *and* contradictory. You nailed it fellah. Well done and heartfelt thanks. Just subbed and looking forward to watching more of your stuff.
Clarity and ‘ can do’ in 20 minutes . Quite extraordinary teaching talent . A huge thank you . It is like seeing all the books I’ve struggled through myopically but with glasses on now ! Thank you , thank you , big and bold 😊👍
I have been a musician for many years. Although I have had no formal training, I play multiple instruments. I have VERY ELEMENTARY understanding of music theory. In just a few minutes of watching this video, I have gained more musical understanding than I have in YEARS. I navigated to his website where I watched another video on jazz voicing. Incredible! Some people have a talent for stripping down the most complex ideas and teaching them in an easy to understand manner. Mr. Bradley is one such person and is a teaching genius!
Excellent lesson. I began playing classical piano at age 5. I'm 56 now and have forgotten much. These kinds of lessons are perfect for me. Great refresher.
20 years ago as a classical singing student and lifetime bad but joyful pianist, I wanted to learn jazz piano. But I was hanging with serious heads and always felt to intimidated, especially with my crappy ear. Sitting here with my family on Christmas eve, all with covid positive so we had to cancel seeing anyone, and my wife said how much she wishes I'd finally learn some jazz piano. So glad I found this video to get me started. Simple and clear, just enough info without going too slow or repetitive, just incredible work. Very grateful and excited to be starting my jazz journey with you
Earlier this year I started watching this video but got lost quickly. After picking up some music theory, I was surprised that this time, I can get through the entire video and understand quite a lot of it. Thank you for your tutorial!
Wow Cat!!! You really laid it out! I’m a Musician of over 50 years and a Music Educator for over 35 years. You utilize the method of teaching that I have always subscribed to which is teaching the concepts! Teaching concepts really empowers students to grow without stoic limitations in their understanding and applications of information. Well done! Kudos! Interestingly enough, one of my Music Students sent me this video to ask my opinion of it! “Each One Teach One!” I’d welcome the opportunity to connect with you more about good and sound pedagogy! Blessings!
😢😢😢 Good luck to those who are just starting Jazz then jam this video on UA-cam. I wish I have discovered this channel 20 years ago I wouldn't have suffer to that extent. I still gain alot. You are a legend.
Excellent lesson. I began playing classical piano at age 5. I'm 56 now and have forgotten much. These kinds of lessons are perfect for me. Great refresher.
That is teaching mastery at work. I can’t believe it. I’ve been doing some teaching as a bass player for many years now. This is amazingly clear and very, very well done. Julian, you are an inspiration and a model for me. Thank you for being what you are, a great musician and I would add an awesome pedagogue.
All I can say is God bless u. For telling us all and truth. I have never gotten a comprehensive explaination like this. You made everything simple. I will follow your page and check out all resources thanks sir. Samuel from Nigeria
I tried to learn what is in the first 5 minutes of this video many times over from books in the 90s, and I never understood. And now I can literally heat it, and I understand more than I ever did. Thanks Julian. Sometimes what we need is a good teacher. and the information will clarify itself.
20 mins full of information. step by step. thanks a lot!!!! im a classical pianist, and im slowly shifting to jazz but im so confused of the chords and how to do voicings, also the jazz scales .. thanks
You are a very good teacher. You can do it because you understand it and have a passion for teaching, I think and want to share your knowledge - not sure why music was always hard for me, there was no overall picture and it was stuff I could not put together, I think you know this problem and you are overcoming it. Great work and thank you.
It's quite astonishing the level of clarity you have throughout such a short video. I have one comment tho and I say this with respect, the video is amazing. Extensions are not always built on the major scale. The extensions of a chord always follow the mode of the chord. For example in the key of C major if you take Dm7, the ninth would be natural (E), but if you try to add the natural ninth to a Em7 for example (F#), it will sound weird, because the second (ninth at the octave) is naturally flat over a third degree and F# is also not in the key of C. From E to F is half a tone, not a whole one. The extensions are basically the notes you skipped building the chord, but theyre up an octave. Makes perfect sense to skip that bit for the sake of clarity, but in my opinion it can lead to people thinking the sharps and flats on extensions are actually out of nowhere. Again, amazing video, just my tiddy grain of salt for the curious
not only did i understand all the concepts it helped me comprehend other parts of music theory i was struggling with, you´re a fantastic teacher. Thank you for this video!
As someone that plays some very simple bits of piano every now and then, the first 1/3 was very helpful for understanding the structure of chords a bit better.
Maaaan, slightly bittersweet to hear communicated so concisely things that have taken a long time for me to learn on my own, mostly through trial and error and scattered tutorials which have been way less clear and concise. Some of the scale stuff was new to me though. Feeling much clearer on these foundations. Thanks heaps!
Thank you for these videos, just a comment: it would be appreciated if you play a piece at the end including all of the material being thought, I'm sure all of us would enjoy, thank you.
This video has been great for me. I have ADHD and I always had intuition in music but everytime I was learning music theory I always keep moving with a lot of gaps. So this worls perfect to re organize what I already know.
So many "learn this or that in 15 minutes" videos are on UA-cam that I rarely ever click on one anymore. But there was something about this man's hairline that inclined me to believe he was about business and sweet heavenly Jesus was that an impeccable deduction on my part. I've taken hours long courses, read all kinds of books, and followed "jazz instructors" for literally years and have never felt like I've made as much headway in jazz as I did in this 20 minute video. It's almost unbelievable and it doesn't even seem real. I'm in shock and complete awe at how my music life feels so much different after watching this, so much freer. I was nearly paralyzed by doubt when approaching jazz, so much I knew I didn't know and struggled to find answers to. I had these musical ideas in my head for years that I wanted to articulate but the musical vocabulary eluded me. Never until today, July 29 of 2021, was anyone able to give me the understanding and depth of knowledge I was afforded in this short but incredibly powerful tutorial. I was actually seriously considering paying for a $,4,000 course offered by another UA-camr, Noah Kellum, but after seeing this I 100% know for a fact I won't need to anymore. This is exactly the perfect foundation I've sought to begin my personal jazz expressions on. If you read, Julian, feel free to send a Cashapp request to $ngangajameil.
Very cool. I never heard of that chordal tones + whole step principle. Nice quick way to grab a scale that will work. I missed the role of the tri-tone in establishing the tension and release in the subdominant, dominant and tonic chords of those ii-v-i progressions.
This was an amzingly well structured presentation! As a begginer that can barley play Christmas carols I was able to follow till the end and with great interest. I will definitely have this video on my file and come back to it when my technical skills are (hopefully 😅) better. Thank you 😊🙏🏼
That C Lydian-Dominant scale can also be looked at and called the G Melodic Minor scale, same notes starting from its root G with the minor 3rd of the b flat and major 7th of the f sharp.
Excellent, succinct, clear video. Going to be returning to this for sure. Another video on secondary dominants and tritone substitutions would cover almost everything, lol
well done man!! I play guitar a bit, sort of "trying to stay normal" thing, and I love dicking around chord progressions. but I'd say I don't have a "feeling" or sth, and I stumble a lot when I wanna write a melody or improv a bit (I am self-taught though). your organizing of these things unlocked a small part of my mind! thanks a lot man
Thanks mate. I'm a fiddle player trying to get into jazz violin and this is just what I needed. I had picked up a lot of this in bits, but I understand it all pretty well now. Been taking notes like I'm back at school. I just need to practice these arpeggios/chord tones in each key (I'm not likely to be playing more than 2 notes at once so not really chords). Jazz violin teachers on here seem to either take this knowledge as granted, or they're stuck trying to explain it from the start and not really getting anywhere. Also I'm not very good at reading music yet which makes it slow going, but it all looks so clear on a piano keyboard. I play a bit of piano too just to write accompaniments/mess about, not my forte so to speak, but in terms of viewing it's probably the clearest instrument to demonstrate something on.
Hello Julián, of course you can download a II-V-I cord progression from multible ressources and learn different scales found everywhere, but my brain really works different, as I can‘t memorize all these details without knowing the context, i.e. the connection between them fitting to accompany the melody. In this video you clearly describe this. If this vídeo represents the standard for Jazz courses one can book as I guessed it, I could give it a try. Thanks a lot for this revealing presentation!!!!
2 and 5, Example if I remember correctly, ii chord e minor, V chord A7 is in key D. Thnks for brain exercise, I played it simultaneously on keyboard while watching your video. Thnks.
you gave me this for free and u don’t even know me. i will make you proud master.
I HAVE THE HAT I YOUR PROFILE PICTURE (lol I was just practicing and noticed that)
Wait is that me
Taht looks like me
Who are you lol
I have that hoodie
It will take me 20 years to master what you say in 20 minutes.
Well, as a 15 years old teen, If I can understand it, you obviously too man!
@@alejandrom.4680 If a 51 year old man can master it in 20 years, you 15 year old teen too can master it in 02 years. When it come to music the early age is a bless. Hope you will play great in future. :-)
Actually, if you actually cared to learn it. And spent about an hour a day on it. It'd be pretty possible to learn this in a year. Yes to MASTER it, it might take quite a bit of time. But this isn't impossible to understand and it just depends on how often you practice
John Ny, Don’t get overwhelmed! 6 months ago I had no idea about music theory whatsoever, but today I could say I master it pretty well.
LingLing mastered that in less than a week by practicing 40 hours a day
Nobody explained me the chord types as you did in this video. I understand them perfectly now. This 20 minutes is unbelievable. Thank you very much.
Ikr
Agreed!
Saves a lot of people a year of pianoclass. :-)
Al you have to do is learn this in all 12 keys.
abz124816 Do one key every month and in one year you’re through
As a metalhead at heart open to all kinds of music, this was fascinating and so clearly explained. That minor 2-5-1 with the C minor-major 7 @14:50 in context actually made my jaw drop. So hauntingly beautiful. I know very little about music theory but this makes me want to learn.
YES. In rock circles, there's an "anti music theory" crowd. They don't know what they're missing. An open mind is the best tool any musician can have.
So you learn the 2-5-1 the most easy and is a rudiments and you have a lot more progression, you get that but what happened with the others is so much to learn this is just to make you feel better, like you learn a lot of you really want to learn believe me you will need years to learn not just 20 minutes!
@@michaelnieves9688 I mean he did say he knows it's very little about music theory but it makes him want to learn
@@michaelnieves9688 Duh! It's called practice...
Learn music theory. It'll make your music far more interesting. You may be able to understand how musicians you like created their music, too!
Thank you so much. I've played "by ear" or rather "self taught" over the years but always thought jazz would be almost impossible for me to learn. By watching this video a light is coming to my mind and started to believe and embrace a new level for me to play, jazz. Thank you, Mr. Julian Bradley.
Without ARPANET=internet, I wonder how many years of lessons would have been spent. Very succinct!
This is the absolute best music theory instruction video I've seen on UA-cam.
Other videos I've researched on this stuff vary from confusing to - confusing *and* contradictory.
You nailed it fellah. Well done and heartfelt thanks. Just subbed and looking forward to watching more of your stuff.
💯 Agree. No fat on this video whatsoever
Clarity and ‘ can do’ in 20 minutes . Quite extraordinary teaching talent . A huge thank you . It is like seeing all the books I’ve struggled through myopically but with glasses on now !
Thank you , thank you , big and bold 😊👍
0:57 After playing augmented and diminished chords he played the major one again. I have found my OCD pal :D
I have been a musician for many years. Although I have had no formal training, I play multiple instruments. I have VERY ELEMENTARY understanding of music theory. In just a few minutes of watching this video, I have gained more musical understanding than I have in YEARS. I navigated to his website where I watched another video on jazz voicing. Incredible! Some people have a talent for stripping down the most complex ideas and teaching them in an easy to understand manner. Mr. Bradley is one such person and is a teaching genius!
I think I almost cried when he played the 4th and 5th voicings. Never heard those before but that was like the most beautiful thing ever!!
Honestly I feel enlightened after watching this
The greatest music theory tutorial channel on UA-cam. Not just for pianists
I've been playing piano since I was young. 8 minutes in and I've learned more than I can thank you for.... So thanks...
Excellent lesson. I began playing classical piano at age 5. I'm 56 now and have forgotten much. These kinds of lessons are perfect for me. Great refresher.
20 years ago as a classical singing student and lifetime bad but joyful pianist, I wanted to learn jazz piano. But I was hanging with serious heads and always felt to intimidated, especially with my crappy ear. Sitting here with my family on Christmas eve, all with covid positive so we had to cancel seeing anyone, and my wife said how much she wishes I'd finally learn some jazz piano. So glad I found this video to get me started. Simple and clear, just enough info without going too slow or repetitive, just incredible work. Very grateful and excited to be starting my jazz journey with you
Thanks for this! I'm mostly a classical musician but I'm trying to branch out into Jazz. I really appreciate your videos.
Earlier this year I started watching this video but got lost quickly. After picking up some music theory, I was surprised that this time, I can get through the entire video and understand quite a lot of it. Thank you for your tutorial!
this video is so well-timed because I just got back into piano yesterday and wanted to do exactly everything you said in this video
Perfect! I'm so glad this was good timing for you Toast!
Wow Cat!!! You really laid it out! I’m a Musician of over 50 years and a Music Educator for over 35 years. You utilize the method of teaching that I have always subscribed to which is teaching the concepts! Teaching concepts really empowers students to grow without stoic limitations in their understanding and applications of information. Well done! Kudos! Interestingly enough, one of my Music Students sent me this video to ask my opinion of it! “Each One Teach One!” I’d welcome the opportunity to connect with you more about good and sound pedagogy! Blessings!
😢😢😢 Good luck to those who are just starting Jazz then jam this video on UA-cam. I wish I have discovered this channel 20 years ago I wouldn't have suffer to that extent. I still gain alot. You are a legend.
Hey. You are an explanatory genius. Cannot believe how concisely you’ve covered these topics! All the best and thanks for everything! 👌🏼😎😎🚀
Beautiful distillation of bare principles. Bravo!
wow!!! you've just unlocked a whole new level for me in 20 min
Excellent lesson. I began playing classical piano at age 5. I'm 56 now and have forgotten much. These kinds of lessons are perfect for me. Great refresher.
Unbelievably well explained
Brilliant. Your style and pacing is really effective. Thanks very much for this.
Omg thank you. wow, I can't believe how well you explained this and how easy this makes reading jazz chords now. I had no idea it was this simple!
You are a life saver ,the way you explained it makes it crystal clear for the beginners,helps me a lot ! Thanks so much
WOW!! Great lesson! Books for jazz beginners can often be confusing....your presentation is so clear and understandable!.... and in 20 min! Thanx!
I cried watching this video because it’s the information I’ve been looking for all along. Please. Continue on with theory next!
That is teaching mastery at work. I can’t believe it. I’ve been doing some teaching as a bass player for many years now. This is amazingly clear and very, very well done. Julian, you are an inspiration and a model for me. Thank you for being what you are, a great musician and I would add an awesome pedagogue.
All I can say is God bless u. For telling us all and truth. I have never gotten a comprehensive explaination like this. You made everything simple. I will follow your page and check out all resources thanks sir. Samuel from Nigeria
Great to see a new video Julian. You are such a great teacher!
What a great tutorial. This was a great review for me with a few new concepts as well. Thank you for taking the time to make it.
I tried to learn what is in the first 5 minutes of this video many times over from books in the 90s, and I never understood. And now I can literally heat it, and I understand more than I ever did.
Thanks Julian. Sometimes what we need is a good teacher. and the information will clarify itself.
20 mins full of information. step by step. thanks a lot!!!! im a classical pianist, and im slowly shifting to jazz but im so confused of the chords and how to do voicings, also the jazz scales .. thanks
Fantastic, high quality content! Well done, subscribed!
Thank you. This is so clear music theory
Que aula maravilhosa! Depois de anos enxergando o Jazz como "coisa de outro mundo", finalmente consegui entendê-lo!! 👏👏👏
You are a very good teacher. You can do it because you understand it and have a passion for teaching, I think and want to share your knowledge - not sure why music was always hard for me, there was no overall picture and it was stuff I could not put together, I think you know this problem and you are overcoming it. Great work and thank you.
Your mastery and calm is reassuring and inspirational..
Genius, finally a music teacher that can clearly communicate. Thumbs up!
10 minutes and already I've been playing better than the 8 years I've been playing piano, thanks for the video really helpful.
I’m a Sax player and no piano experience. So this is very very nice to reference. Thank you so so much !!
I do love the jazz chords! Looking forward to practicing this. Thank you!❤
I have been playing music for years and never seen these Concepts explained so simply
Thank you for Excellent on how to play Jazz Chords including minor 7th 9th and 13th chords Cheers
It's quite astonishing the level of clarity you have throughout such a short video. I have one comment tho and I say this with respect, the video is amazing. Extensions are not always built on the major scale. The extensions of a chord always follow the mode of the chord. For example in the key of C major if you take Dm7, the ninth would be natural (E), but if you try to add the natural ninth to a Em7 for example (F#), it will sound weird, because the second (ninth at the octave) is naturally flat over a third degree and F# is also not in the key of C. From E to F is half a tone, not a whole one. The extensions are basically the notes you skipped building the chord, but theyre up an octave.
Makes perfect sense to skip that bit for the sake of clarity, but in my opinion it can lead to people thinking the sharps and flats on extensions are actually out of nowhere. Again, amazing video, just my tiddy grain of salt for the curious
not only did i understand all the concepts it helped me comprehend other parts of music theory i was struggling with, you´re a fantastic teacher. Thank you for this video!
As someone that plays some very simple bits of piano every now and then, the first 1/3 was very helpful for understanding the structure of chords a bit better.
Maaaan, slightly bittersweet to hear communicated so concisely things that have taken a long time for me to learn on my own, mostly through trial and error and scattered tutorials which have been way less clear and concise. Some of the scale stuff was new to me though. Feeling much clearer on these foundations. Thanks heaps!
Thank you for these videos, just a comment: it would be appreciated if you play a piece at the end including all of the material being thought, I'm sure all of us would enjoy, thank you.
Trump: WRONG
This video has been great for me. I have ADHD and I always had intuition in music but everytime I was learning music theory I always keep moving with a lot of gaps. So this worls perfect to re organize what I already know.
'THE' - best theory video on youtube - Many Thanks
Excellent Julian. Simple is best :-)
Thank you Alistair! I'm so glad this video helped you.
Beautifully illustrated. I love it. I could see how Earl Klugh composed his music. That 2 5 1 is common in his music though his is extended
So many "learn this or that in 15 minutes" videos are on UA-cam that I rarely ever click on one anymore. But there was something about this man's hairline that inclined me to believe he was about business and sweet heavenly Jesus was that an impeccable deduction on my part. I've taken hours long courses, read all kinds of books, and followed "jazz instructors" for literally years and have never felt like I've made as much headway in jazz as I did in this 20 minute video. It's almost unbelievable and it doesn't even seem real. I'm in shock and complete awe at how my music life feels so much different after watching this, so much freer. I was nearly paralyzed by doubt when approaching jazz, so much I knew I didn't know and struggled to find answers to. I had these musical ideas in my head for years that I wanted to articulate but the musical vocabulary eluded me. Never until today, July 29 of 2021, was anyone able to give me the understanding and depth of knowledge I was afforded in this short but incredibly powerful tutorial. I was actually seriously considering paying for a $,4,000 course offered by another UA-camr, Noah Kellum, but after seeing this I 100% know for a fact I won't need to anymore. This is exactly the perfect foundation I've sought to begin my personal jazz expressions on. If you read, Julian, feel free to send a Cashapp request to $ngangajameil.
Julian , your Christmas jazz pieces are still my favourite. Every Christmas I applaud you ! 😅
Congratulations. Such a great video. You do a terrific job at simplifying, explaining and exemplifying a great deal of theory. All the best.
18:37 Lmao didn't expect a Wu Tang song to show up in your videos fam, cheeky move right there 😉
Also noticed that :D
I like how you explain this in such a way that it makes sense. Very helpful.
Thanks! I like how you explained extended chords. C13 uses B-Flat , whereas a C Maj7 13 uses B.
18:37 The Charmels - As long as I've got you, composed by Isaac Hayes and David Porter, sampled by The RZA. Wu tang is for the children. 👐👐👐👐👐
Ok
Very cool. I never heard of that chordal tones + whole step principle. Nice quick way to grab a scale that will work. I missed the role of the tri-tone in establishing the tension and release in the subdominant, dominant and tonic chords of those ii-v-i progressions.
Wow. I was almost lost but you explained this so well, I think I have a goal for my piano life.
Very clear explanation of structure of jazz music; thank you
couldn’t find any better tutorial to teach jazz. thank you so much for teaching so great.
This video is phenomenal, honestly. Thank you so much for laying out so clearly.
I’ve played for years in the past but never felt that I grasped it. This is what I’ve been looking for!
Great video! It's like looking at the whole thing from up above and seeing the big picture. Thanks for this
This was an amzingly well structured presentation! As a begginer that can barley play Christmas carols I was able to follow till the end and with great interest. I will definitely have this video on my file and come back to it when my technical skills are (hopefully 😅) better.
Thank you 😊🙏🏼
Very beautiful lesson.I understood quite a lot of unresolved concepts
I knew he was the right one when he dropped a Wu Tang melody to illustrate his speech. +1 subscriber.
The whole tone trick blew my mind
You convinced me even just 60 seconds into it! Lovely.
Gosh this is a new world for a classical pianist very excited that you explained it so amazingly!
Thank you - I am just starting to look at jazz chords, this is so clearly explained, you are too cool Julian! What a teacher 😎
Never bin taught so much detail in such a short time now all I gotta do is practice good lesson thanks gonna check out your other stuff ...subbed
Struggling for weeks with this in Music School and now I understood within 20 minutes. Thanks a lot!
That C Lydian-Dominant scale can also be looked at and called the G Melodic Minor scale, same notes starting from its root G with the minor 3rd of the b flat and major 7th of the f sharp.
Excellent, succinct, clear video. Going to be returning to this for sure. Another video on secondary dominants and tritone substitutions would cover almost everything, lol
wow so easy to understand! thank you! subscribed!
well done man!! I play guitar a bit, sort of "trying to stay normal" thing, and I love dicking around chord progressions. but I'd say I don't have a "feeling" or sth, and I stumble a lot when I wanna write a melody or improv a bit (I am self-taught though). your organizing of these things unlocked a small part of my mind! thanks a lot man
everyone gangsta till theres a chord that is minor and major at the same time
This is the best music lesson i have seen in my whole entire life👌
This video helped me SO MUCH!! No one body explained jazz piano as good as you just did.
Thank you!!!!! One of the best video lessons ever put together!
Thanks mate. I'm a fiddle player trying to get into jazz violin and this is just what I needed. I had picked up a lot of this in bits, but I understand it all pretty well now. Been taking notes like I'm back at school. I just need to practice these arpeggios/chord tones in each key (I'm not likely to be playing more than 2 notes at once so not really chords).
Jazz violin teachers on here seem to either take this knowledge as granted, or they're stuck trying to explain it from the start and not really getting anywhere.
Also I'm not very good at reading music yet which makes it slow going, but it all looks so clear on a piano keyboard. I play a bit of piano too just to write accompaniments/mess about, not my forte so to speak, but in terms of viewing it's probably the clearest instrument to demonstrate something on.
Good tutorial. Now I can play with more complicated chords. Thanks❤❤
Julian! You're a life saver. Thanks for sharing this video for free. God bless you!
All in one combo. Great explanation. Rarely seen 😲😲😲
You explained this so simply it gave me goosebumps. I now understand! Thanks you!
Thanks. I am so excited as I know much of this theory. I just never knew I knew it. It's like learning how to speak a new language.
Maan that was incredibly clear explanation and I do feel enlightened thank you so much
Hello Julián, of course you can download a II-V-I cord progression from multible ressources and learn different scales found everywhere, but my brain really works different, as I can‘t memorize all these details without knowing the context, i.e. the connection between them fitting to accompany the melody. In this video you clearly describe this. If this vídeo represents the standard for Jazz courses one can book as I guessed it, I could give it a try. Thanks a lot for this revealing presentation!!!!
2 and 5,
Example if I remember correctly, ii chord e minor, V chord A7 is in key D. Thnks for brain exercise, I played it simultaneously on keyboard while watching your video. Thnks.
This was very informative thank you. Great to hear somebody say "types of chord (singular)".
Excellent explanation and unlike a personal tutor I now get to go over the lesson time and time again until it sinks in
DUDE you are my HERO for explain it so clear!
20 minutes, and I already understood most of the part. Just... Impressive....
So simply explained ! Wow