Another brilliant video Jamie. Every time I think of giving up sax, I watch one of your videos and it makes me want to play. Your enthusiasm is infectious. Thanks.
Jamie. Can you review Kirk Whalum solo on Westchester Lady - Fourplay/ Rick B/ Boney James.... there are some interesting notes and I can't figure them one. Kirk solo starts at around 4:30. Such a wicked solo!
Watch "Phil Collins Big Band - Pick up the pieces" on UA-cam ua-cam.com/video/R9eQkTJZlNk/v-deo.html I am not sure if you have listened to this crazy sax solo by James Carter at the 18th minutes. The man was engulfed by the sax. I wonder how the other professional sax player felt after Carter's performance.
Great info thanks! Just started playing again after 25 years out! With your help and Tomplay I should be back in the game in no time! Will buy you a coffee Cheers
Jamie you are a great teacher!Sanborn, Pickett, Grover are inspiration to all saxophonist. Great job putting this lesson together. I will use this on my next Gig!
It had been a long time since I had enjoyed a music class as fantastic as this. Thank you very much indeed, Jamie. Huge Hug. Hacía tiempo que no disfrutaba de una clase de musica tan fantástica como está. Muchas gracias Jamie, un abrazo 👍
So fun and exciting! Consider myself a very lucky bird to have seen Lenny P with TOP at BBKing's club in NY a few years back! LOL at the end bloopers as usual, one looked just like what I did when trying the LP lick, ha ha!
So the magpie heard that "there's one scale to rule them all". Wow! That magpie then gathered this "one scale" from all the other cool-sounding birds making sure to carefully imitate them, right down to the scoops, bends, and rhythms. That magpie took all those "precious" scale bits and soon everyone heard one wickedly cool magpie. Now that magpie "rules them all." Bloody fantastic!
Thanks for this fantastic video Jamie, it's given me loads to work on. It's really helpful that you put them all in the same key as it highlights the similarities and differences between them, which makes it much easier to use fragments to improvise from. Thanks again!
Great video again. What was missing for me was a deeper explanation of how to bend and scoop the notes and what these 'special' characters look like on the staff.
Brilliant, Jamie! Thank you for another great Sunday video. So helpful and so much fun working through your tutorials. Looking forward to playing through this one this afternoon. Tally Ho!
Excellent lesson, probably the best yet. :) It would be great if you could do one on how to do those consecutive falls that you’ve written in your Caravan arrangement. Is it done with the larynx only?
Hi Jamie. Every sax teacher I have ever had, bar none, says the best way to improve as a jazzer is to listen to and transcribe other sax players work. Here's an idea - why don't you do a video with loads of examples of blues scale phrases for us novices to pick out... Love your lessons, Pete
Hey Tony - check out the chapter markers whilst using UA-cam, then you can skip through all the stuff you don’t wanna see. I can tell you’re a get straight down to it guy, so apologies for any waffle you’re frustrated with! Just skip it! The pit falls of free content I guess…but don’t forget that’s what it is - awesome FREE lessons every week that you would normally pay a lot of money for. 😉
Hey Jamie, I'm confused about the backing track. It is not Improvisation Mastery 33, Blues in Concert Eb. It is in E minor, and it is not a blues. We can clearly hear your voice saying 'second eight', indicating it is an eight bar form. Where can we find this track?
Thanks for the video is very good for me, for my studies... I love your sound... What is the name of the mouthpiece you use in this video? Thanks for the reply. Hello and good music Ps sorry for my translate I'm Italian 😜😎🎷
Yeah, one of your best lessons. I noticed you went through some personal growth w.r.t. your presentation skills. Addressing the viewer directly so we don't realise you're talking to a camera. I had to chuckle out-loud a couple of times as well. Well done.
@@GetYourSaxTogether Just re-visited this lesson and you did it again !! I laughed out loud. Must be the sign of a truly engaging and funny episode. B.t.w. you DID sound very cool. 🙂
Hi Jamie, great video again, I was always wondering how people do this you nailed it again. What software are you using to play the music? Thanks a lot.
@@GetYourSaxTogether I thought the tone was fantastic. Hard to imagine a cane reed sounding better. Your ears are very good to hear such subtle differences. Just wondering, can you hear the same subtle differences on your recordings that you can hear when actually playing? The sound transfers a bit different when playing versus from speakers.
I've heard that the secret to make great bluesy lines is to use the minor blues scale while going up while using the major when going down (or was it dominant?, I'm not sure...). Any thoughts on that? I also acknowledge the importance on the "feel" of the groove which, by the way, you are a f******** master! I would also liste to Scott Hamilton, he has a lot of easy tunes with bluesy lines and sticks basically to the notes of the chords... Sweet... 😉👍
Sort of: the main thing is the contrast between the flat 3 and the major 3, the flat 5 and the regular 5, and major 6 and the flat 7. So your line needs to be "aware" of whether you are resolving those flattened notes against the comparatively bright sounding major notes. You can work that it both directions.
Hello, Good Evening, could someone recommend a saxophone brand for beginners, or a reliable store. I'm from Brazil, but I'm going to buy in the United States. Thanks
Thank you very much. Sorry for the new question, but you advise to buy a new Jean Paul. Or used from a famous brand? Thanks, and again sorry for the new question.@@GetYourSaxTogether
The backing track is part of my Improvisation Mastery class, which is not open at the moment, but will open again soon. Many of the tracks are also available in the Inner Circle Membership. The link to join is www.getyoursaxtogether.com/innercircle
I am a pianist but will be looking to play an additianl instrument ....so if I where to get a sax what is the most commonly used? Tennor or baratone? Part B question is Anyone know where cuz imma disabled veteran on a fixed income, so has any one know a good url to get my first saxiphone? nothing extravagent but gets the job done reguardless of paying for brand name so popularity of the maker is les priority than playaction and sound!
I would not recommend baritone to start. Tenor or alto your best bets. I do recommend new so that any problems that arise are from you not the horn. Theses sites may be helpful: jazzfuel.com/best-tenor-saxophone/ OR jazzfuel.com/best-alto-saxophone/ Good luck ... and thanks for your service!
Another brilliant video Jamie. Every time I think of giving up sax, I watch one of your videos and it makes me want to play. Your enthusiasm is infectious. Thanks.
Go for it!
Jamie, I love your energy, your playing, your sound..... You are quite inspiring. Thank you
Thanks! 🙏
I saw you on New year’s eve with Joan Armatrading in the german TV. Good job as always. Thx for all.
Cool! That was a fun gig. 👍🏻
@@GetYourSaxTogether Been seeing Joan for about 45 years, and she still sounds great. What a legend.
Jamie. Can you review Kirk Whalum solo on Westchester Lady - Fourplay/ Rick B/ Boney James.... there are some interesting notes and I can't figure them one. Kirk solo starts at around 4:30. Such a wicked solo!
We will add these songs to our viewers' wish list.
Watch "Phil Collins Big Band - Pick up the pieces" on UA-cam
ua-cam.com/video/R9eQkTJZlNk/v-deo.html
I am not sure if you have listened to this crazy sax solo by James Carter at the 18th minutes. The man was engulfed by the sax. I wonder how the other professional sax player felt after Carter's performance.
Simply amazing... What a sound... Thx so much... From Argentina 🇦🇷
Anytime!
Very inspiring lesson. Funny How you Sound almost like David Sanborn while playing on a tenor with an Otto Link.
Peter from Hamburg
😎
Great info thanks! Just started playing again after 25 years out! With your help and Tomplay I should be back in the game in no time! Will buy you a coffee
Cheers
Thanks! 👍
Jamie you are a great teacher!Sanborn, Pickett, Grover are inspiration to all saxophonist. Great job putting this lesson together. I will use this on my next Gig!
Thanks! 🙏
Great licks. Fantastic lesson. Thanks Mr Anderson!
Thanks Pavel 🙏
Thank you very much, Jamie. Heiner from Bonn, Germany
👍
Amazing job as usual Jamie:) Greetings from Turkey.
Thanks Eren! 👍
Jamie, really clean, direct and inspirational lesson. Sunday thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great lesson, really informative.
Thank you, thank you, thank you! Love the way your’re teaching!
Thanks! 🙏
Awesome licks! On the Sanborn lick, repeating it a second time and ending on F# instead of C# sounds very cool.
Classic call and response. Brilliant.
Brilliant lesson Jamie. Great playing too. Top quality and thanks for the sheet music.
Thanks! 🙏
It had been a long time since I had enjoyed a music class as fantastic as this. Thank you very much indeed, Jamie. Huge Hug. Hacía tiempo que no disfrutaba de una clase de musica tan fantástica como está. Muchas gracias Jamie, un abrazo 👍
Thanks for watching!
You are a fantastic instructor.
Thanks!
So fun and exciting! Consider myself a very lucky bird to have seen Lenny P with TOP at BBKing's club in NY a few years back! LOL at the end bloopers as usual, one looked just like what I did when trying the LP lick, ha ha!
😉
Great lesson Jamie. A good resource for "Magpies" is blues harmonica. Ive used some blues licks from Little Walter and Sonny Boy Williamson solos.
Great!
So the magpie heard that "there's one scale to rule them all". Wow! That magpie then gathered this "one scale" from all the other cool-sounding birds making sure to carefully imitate them, right down to the scoops, bends, and rhythms. That magpie took all those "precious" scale bits and soon everyone heard one wickedly cool magpie. Now that magpie "rules them all." Bloody fantastic!
Great comment Bob, love that!
Thanks for this fantastic video Jamie, it's given me loads to work on. It's really helpful that you put them all in the same key as it highlights the similarities and differences between them, which makes it much easier to use fragments to improvise from. Thanks again!
Glad it was helpful!
Best advice of all time!! Thanks so much Jamie!!
Thanks Gerd! 🙏
Great video again. What was missing for me was a deeper explanation of how to bend and scoop the notes and what these 'special' characters look like on the staff.
Yeh, that’s not really the remit of this video but try this ua-cam.com/video/oq0XJn9qw_4/v-deo.html
Great, thanks.
Thank you 1000x for these videos!
Thank you!
Brilliant, Jamie! Thank you for another great Sunday video. So helpful and so much fun working through your tutorials. Looking forward to playing through this one this afternoon. Tally Ho!
Thanks Cindy 🙏
All the examples and EVERY blues scale are in this free PDF cheatsheet!▶️www.getyoursaxtogether.com/betterblues
Magnifique 🎉🎉🎉🎉merci beaucoup infiniment ! 🎷🎶👍
Merci! 🙏
Just stumbled across this! Brilliant Jamie. x
Glad you enjoyed it! 🙏🏻
What a fantastic tutorial! 😊🔥🎷 Thanks so much for it Jamie.
Thanks Stefanie! 🙏
OK - that's me fired up for another week! Great stuff Jamie!
Thanks 🙏
Thanks again Jamie for another great lesson, will be trying this out later today. Just need to get my scoops and bends sorted first 😀
Enjoy the journey!
Hi Jamie, I just love watching your video's, they are so informative, and Fun.
Glad you like them!
Great Video. Thanks Jamie
Glad you enjoyed it
You're doing a great job Jamie...!
Thanks!
Excellent lesson, probably the best yet. :)
It would be great if you could do one on how to do those consecutive falls that you’ve written in your Caravan arrangement.
Is it done with the larynx only?
Check this out ua-cam.com/video/oq0XJn9qw_4/v-deo.html
Great lesson! I think the Grover Washington lick sounds a lot like "Wade in the Water".
Thanks David 🙏
Awesome!! So helpful. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful Zoe!
That was awesome!!!😃Thank you
Glad you liked it! 🙏
Well done Jamie!
Thanks Alex 🙏
Hi Jamie. Every sax teacher I have ever had, bar none, says the best way to improve as a jazzer is to listen to and transcribe other sax players work. Here's an idea - why don't you do a video with loads of examples of blues scale phrases for us novices to pick out...
Love your lessons, Pete
On the one hand that’s actually a good idea, but on the other, you’re not really getting the full benefit of the process if I do it for you?! 😬
Awesome Jamie, great licks 👍
Thanks Butch 🙏
Just get to the bloody lesson!
Hey Tony - check out the chapter markers whilst using UA-cam, then you can skip through all the stuff you don’t wanna see. I can tell you’re a get straight down to it guy, so apologies for any waffle you’re frustrated with! Just skip it! The pit falls of free content I guess…but don’t forget that’s what it is - awesome FREE lessons every week that you would normally pay a lot of money for. 😉
Thanks for another great lesson
Thanks 🙏
Great lesson, inspiring! Can you tell me how you work out what key a lick is in before transcribing?
Thanks Dan. You may find this helpful: ua-cam.com/video/jA-MmCR0Ha4/v-deo.html
Great lesson. Love it.😊
Thanks 🙏
So cool and so dope!
Thanks David!
Great stuff Jamie, ta muchly x
Thanks Bob 🙏
Fanatische video again, thanks so much for this. I would like to know what looping software you are using, looks really great.
I use Anytune. Thanks for watching!
Hi Jaime,
I wanted to ask about your mp set-up?
Can you tell me more about it??
Thanks,
Frank N.
ua-cam.com/video/ZdK7VdadkkE/v-deo.html
Hey Jamie, I'm confused about the backing track. It is not Improvisation Mastery 33, Blues in Concert Eb. It is in E minor, and it is not a blues. We can clearly hear your voice saying 'second eight', indicating it is an eight bar form. Where can we find this track?
Track 20 2.2.4
You're the best Jamie♥️
Thanks 🙏
Thanks for the video is very good for me, for my studies... I love your sound... What is the name of the mouthpiece you use in this video?
Thanks for the reply.
Hello and good music
Ps sorry for my translate I'm Italian 😜😎🎷
My setup: ua-cam.com/video/ZdK7VdadkkE/v-deo.html
Jamie example one was killing aha! reminded me of coltrane, Coltrane vs Kenny G... ☹️
😉
Adoro esse professor...aprendendo muito!!!
Thanks 🙏
Yeah, one of your best lessons. I noticed you went through some personal growth w.r.t. your presentation skills. Addressing the viewer directly so we don't realise you're talking to a camera. I had to chuckle out-loud a couple of times as well. Well done.
Thanks Dolph! 🙏
@@GetYourSaxTogether Just re-visited this lesson and you did it again !! I laughed out loud. Must be the sign of a truly engaging and funny episode. B.t.w. you DID sound very cool. 🙂
@@DolphScreamingSax 😉
Thanks aloot Jamie :-)
Thanks James!
Great lesson Jamie! Where can I find that awesome backing track to practice to?
The Eb blues backing track mp3 is # 33 in Improvisation Mastery.
Great lesson Jamie! I’ll be having a go at this today. One question - do you remember the licks, write them down, or even record them???
Well, I remembered those ones! But sure, wrote them down or whatever if that helps.
Useful video 👍👍, is that mouthpiece beechler bellite custom?
Nope. Vintage Otto link. 😎
@@GetYourSaxTogether 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Hi Jamie, great video again, I was always wondering how people do this you nailed it again. What software are you using to play the music? Thanks a lot.
Thanks Theo. Music software is Anytune.
That was awesome Jamie! This is great techniques that I need..I can not seem to get that higher F# tho.. How is it done?
The altissimo video is here: ua-cam.com/video/kURzx_fZ6Ho/v-deo.html
where can I get that backing track, please .
I think it’s from my Improvisation Mastery course?
@@GetYourSaxTogether Can I buy it ?
Is that a cane or plastic ( legere) reed you are using?
Really enjoyed the video by the way.
It’s Legere - but truth be told I’m not too happy with the sound compared to cane on tenor.
@@GetYourSaxTogether I thought the tone was fantastic. Hard to imagine a cane reed sounding better. Your ears are very good to hear such subtle differences. Just wondering, can you hear the same subtle differences on your recordings that you can hear when actually playing? The sound transfers a bit different when playing versus from speakers.
@@pirsquared3251 Just so you know, there's a LOT of difference between the Classic, Studio, Signature, and American Cut in the Legere line.
@@pirsquared3251 some of it is how it feels of course. A couple of videos ago I did a Legere comparison video.
@@Osnosis yeh, I agree.
I've heard that the secret to make great bluesy lines is to use the minor blues scale while going up while using the major when going down (or was it dominant?, I'm not sure...). Any thoughts on that?
I also acknowledge the importance on the "feel" of the groove which, by the way, you are a f******** master!
I would also liste to Scott Hamilton, he has a lot of easy tunes with bluesy lines and sticks basically to the notes of the chords... Sweet...
😉👍
Not sure about the up down thing, although it certainly works to play each scale in chunks.
Sort of: the main thing is the contrast between the flat 3 and the major 3, the flat 5 and the regular 5, and major 6 and the flat 7. So your line needs to be "aware" of whether you are resolving those flattened notes against the comparatively bright sounding major notes. You can work that it both directions.
@@Osnosis Thanks!
Love the energy! Thanks for the helpful video - what sort of sax are you playing there? That finish is pretty much exactly what I'm after
Selmer mark six. 👍🏻
Hello, Good Evening, could someone recommend a saxophone brand for beginners, or a reliable store. I'm from Brazil, but I'm going to buy in the United States.
Thanks
Jean Paul are good.
Thank you very much.
Sorry for the new question, but you advise to buy a new Jean Paul. Or used from a famous brand?
Thanks, and again sorry for the new question.@@GetYourSaxTogether
@@vfa154 for that money I’d buy new.
If I join , can I get that backing track ?
The backing track is part of my Improvisation Mastery class, which is not open at the moment, but will open again soon. Many of the tracks are also available in the Inner Circle Membership. The link to join is www.getyoursaxtogether.com/innercircle
Thanks! I’ve come out of retirement and I have been stuck
Happy to help!
Oh Yeahhhhh 😎🎷🔥
🙏
I am a pianist but will be looking to play an additianl instrument ....so if I where to get a sax what is the most commonly used? Tennor or baratone? Part B question is Anyone know where cuz imma disabled veteran on a fixed income, so has any one know a good url to get my first saxiphone? nothing extravagent but gets the job done reguardless of paying for brand name so popularity of the maker is les priority than playaction and sound!
I would not recommend baritone to start. Tenor or alto your best bets. I do recommend new so that any problems that arise are from you not the horn. Theses sites may be helpful: jazzfuel.com/best-tenor-saxophone/ OR jazzfuel.com/best-alto-saxophone/ Good luck ... and thanks for your service!
The subtitles please
Sorry - can’t do that for every language!!
Aces
Thanks!
It's reassuring to know even the pros get stymied by transposition from time to time.
😉
...and don't forget to crank the 'verb, too.
😎