Every Dominant Chord in Jazz, Explained
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- Опубліковано 3 чер 2024
- Use code "DOMLOGIC" for $5 OFF Instant Access to Chad LB's "60 Phrases on Dominant Chords!" www.jazzlessonvideos.com/down...
Nathan Graybeal is a young artist from North Carolina, most well-known for his UA-cam persona "Saxologic". Originally an avid drawer then animator, he has transferred his love for art to saxophone. He spreads his infectious passion to inspire others in finding the joy of improving in music through online content. Nathan obtained a bachelor’s degree in both jazz and classical saxophone performance from East Carolina University and a master’s degree in studio jazz performance from the University of Miami.
0:00 Intro
1:37 V7
2:49 V7(b9)
3:55 V7(#9)
5:04 V7alt
7:13 V7(#11)
8:31 V7(b13)
10:15 Outro
#jazz #saxophone #improvisation #music
Use code "DOMLOGIC" for $5 OFF Instant Access to Chad LB's "60 Phrases on Dominant Chords!" www.jazzlessonvideos.com/downloads
If you use all at the same time the sax go purple you know
You can hear a dominant 13 chord in some Mozart pieces, and if you check the romantic period music, you'll find all sorts of fancy extensions and colorful chords, Rimsky Korsakov is actually considered to be the inventor diminished scale, and Debussy uses whole tone all over the place, so if romanticism is considered classical, then jazz isn't really that different in terms of colors used.
romantic is not classical era. but i would agree copin love the flat 5 and 6ths and the extensions at b9 like he stated, but most classical used the 7th for the leading tone to go back to home.
eric reed prrelude in e minor gang gang./
Ravel used all of them and he didnt even resolve them
I purchased the whole books, lessons, master classes etc by Chad as a bundle already but you are an excellent teacher just like Chad. You are also very good at breaking down each one to a simplified level. Would have been better if Chad's books came with a bit of intro explanation in them as well (like Steve Neff's book) in addition to the videos that are accessible online. I'm definitely going to buy your jazz standards lesson at JLV.
Very good! the contents, the presentation... Very useful subject too. Dominants can be quite confusing!
Thanks
the mixo b13 is so wild!
Wow, this is a great lesson. I never new of this. I must grab the ebook!!!
Lets DOMINATE the scales!! Good stuff
Love the presentation, great humor.
Love your JLV videos, Nathan! You make me want to purchase every product you talk about. (And I have purchased several after seeing your videos.) See? You are a total success as CEO!! LOL
Love this guy
What to see in the Future? Well this video is great because of the audio visual value and virtual tutoring. How about a video or audio to accompany the book so that the phrases and exercises can be integrated faster?
small correction: Half/Whole dim scale has a #11 in it, not a natural 11.
It's just common sense I tellya! Good Job!
Very creative and helpful vid !
Thanks 🙏🏽
Great video Mr Graybeal. Thanks.
Excellent, Thank a lot, I gonna buy the book
Your a great teacher.
Great video!! On a V7#9, should the upper extensions have a #11 rather than natural 11? Asking for a friend.
Yes, sharp #11! Darn, not sure how I didn't clarify that. Wish I could go back and edit it! Hopefully the diminished scale makes it obvious.
Nicely done
❤❤❤
What would you use for D7#9♮9 in Scoffield's "Chank"? The weird voicing he plays contains both sharp and natural nine
Chromatic scale
During his solo on the album, Scofield plays mostly minor pentatonic and Mixolydian
Major blues scale
not joking just a mixolydian with a chromatic #9, but the better option is to intertwine the minor blues scale with the natural 3d as well. (like the dominant 7th add 11 arpeggio)
@@Lennie_peled Sco probably just uses his ear to guide him thru the harmonic maze!
What period of classical are you referring to? Check out Ravel. It’s full
Of all the jazz extensions you mention, then there’s Stravinsky, Startling harmonies if ever there were…I should mention Webern, Schoenberg, and the other serialists, they took iI WAY outside. Worth checking out!
To be fair he did say the "classical period"
Head spinning
Most of the altered dominants use the melodic minor scale, so you just have to decide or decipher where your “root” is. I don’t think of the different modes of melodic minor, I just think melodic minor in some relation to the root of the chord. Like for a typical ii V I resolution, I’ll use melodic minor a half step up from the root of that V chord. I’m not trying to think “super locrian” or whatever the modal name is.
Edit: also, the melodic minor (ascending) scale is literally just a major scale with a flat third, so the scale itself is very familiar. But flatting that one note makes the whole thing sound so flavorful. It’s pretty cool!
..... is there any reason you're calling the key of C but playing in the key of Eb ?
Hahahahaha