Thank you so much for listening and commenting, its inspiring to hear that people like it
@andrewkratz2264 ай бұрын
. Love your channel
@sorenballegaardmusic4 ай бұрын
That means a lot to me. Thank you and thank you for commenting
@charlesstenger65024 ай бұрын
Since the 50ties I have listened to Mobley, starting with the Messengers. At the time he was my favourite tenor.
@sorenballegaardmusic4 ай бұрын
He is amazing to learn from. He plays clear and with good tone and time. I played everything on his album soul Station
@samtotheg4 ай бұрын
gonna do this asap and was thinking about hearing my lines as of yesterday perfect video as per usual.
@sorenballegaardmusic4 ай бұрын
This is the only way forward in music, better you ears, then everything else follows.
@titosmith79424 ай бұрын
Nicely done! Too often an aspiring player just hears "transcribe solos," but, in my experience, that just means you learn a whole chorus of a solo and can't get it into your playing. Good to hear how to break it down and particularly the "in-the-moment" transcription to get ideas under your fingers.
@sorenballegaardmusic4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. You got it. Love the comment.
@lawrencetaylor41014 ай бұрын
Out of my pay grade, for now. But it was nice to hear how a musician thinks. Merci.
@ScottDuncan534 ай бұрын
I think it is better to start with simple melodies (mary had little lamb or similar) rather than trying to work out complex jazz solos. I'm concerned that it might always be above your pay grade if you don't make it accessible to start. Good luck.
@sorenballegaardmusic4 ай бұрын
Indeed for a beginner, this is not where to start, but taking small parts out of solos is a great inspiration and can be used very much, also just to learn the jazz language. Learning one bar of some solo can be eternal inspiration. Thank you so much commenting and showing interest
@lawrencetaylor41014 ай бұрын
@@ScottDuncan53 You're probably correct that it will probably always be out of my pay grade since I've never been a musician and don't hear music in my head. But I'm still taking piano lessons and my teacher is happy with my progress. And I don't like listening to mediocre jazz players, and virtuoso players aren't my cup of tea.