Hi Jamey, thanks for this video your guitar lessons are wonderful. I recently fell in love with your EP and can't stop listening to it! Great songs, switching from funk, jazz and blues, your band is amazing too and your Tele sound is just WOW. I started to learn The Back Burner by ear, I'd love one lesson on this amazing song and maybe another one on the solo :-D I know I'm asking too much... Keep up the great work, you deserve a great success!
@JameyArent4 жыл бұрын
Emanuele Pecchioli thank you so much for the nice words and for listening to my album! Sure, I can do a lesson breakdown of The Back Burner.
@graffjakobsen33774 жыл бұрын
This is going the right way! I predict u get 100 k views on one of your videos in 6 months. Maybe do a stream also?
@JameyArent4 жыл бұрын
Graff Jakobsen thanks! I hope you are right! I did a stream recently from my Instagram page, but perhaps I’ll do one here as well.
@gwgwgwgw1854 Жыл бұрын
What brand of guitar is that? Beautiful and sounds great!
@JameyArent Жыл бұрын
Thanks! It’s a Kopp Archtops Betty Swing
@eduardswanepoel70604 жыл бұрын
Excellent video as always. I still get confused between modes and arpeggios. If I'm on the two chord, when would I play a D Dorian scale versus a D minor 7 arpeggio...or are they the same thing?
@JameyArent4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! A Dmin7 chord, is built from the following notes: D (root), F (flatted 3rd), A (5th), and C (flatted 7th). If you play each of those chord tones individually, instead of all together as a chord, you are playing a Dmin7 arpeggio. The dorian scale is the scale that goes along with the Dmin7 chord. It contains all the notes from the chord/arpeggio, and a few others. D Dorian: D (root), E (2), F (b3), G (4), A (5), B (6), C (b7)
@anthonyclegg15112 жыл бұрын
Hi jamey, I have difficulty playing jazz chords, is it OK to play standard chords, when playing jazz solo's, nice guitar playing, thanks.?.
@JameyArent2 жыл бұрын
It's important in this style to play idiomatically correct chords that contain notes like the 7th and even the extensions (9,11,13) to give the improviser or meloody player all the information. If you're finding these chords to be difficult, try just playing the top two or three notes of the chord, and slowly adding in the other notes as it becomes more comfortable.