For a Step-by-Step video guide + PDF workbook with 150+ minutes of video exercises and application through pentatonics in jazz improvisation, get instant access with code “PENT25” for $25 OFF at: www.jazzlessonvideos.com/pentatonics Use code "PENTETUDES" for $5 off "30 Pentatonic Etudes on Jazz Standards" by Chad LB! www.jazzlessonvideos.com/downloads
@Adamswelltroddenpathways5 ай бұрын
“The modern sound” is now at least 60 years old! It’s still awesome
@cyprianpakua14514 ай бұрын
Music matters :)
@JamesW-li5oi4 ай бұрын
it's okay i guess. I'm trying to unlearn it personally.
@eliasmsv31562 ай бұрын
Modern is a dated period already, so it makes sense. Contemporary would be actually new stuff
@jeffgomez883 ай бұрын
00:07 Right from beginning, killer lines are being demonstrated with the power of pentatonic shifting. All the concepts in this video open up another world to using pentatonics. Keep up the great work.
@rslane324 ай бұрын
Wow, I have never seen such a clear but complete and concise explanation of this subject. Nathan, you are so good at what you do. I’m off to the races to get these under my fingers . once I’ve internalized these few , I’ll come back for the course .
@jharsch34534 ай бұрын
Tony Rice was one of the most influential Bluegrass guitarists in the history of the genre, this is the kind of video I need to push boundaries like he did. He took the traditional sounds of American fiddle music and blended it with jazz
@gregoryswift95734 ай бұрын
I remember messing around in A dorian realizing theres 3 pentatonics Am Bm Em you can hop around in and play inside the mode. This apllies to any mode and really helped me explore soundscapes and movement while i was trying to get one foot in the jazz door
@JamesW-li5oi4 ай бұрын
i think there are a million ways to approach it. you do what works for you. I prefer to just take a little phrase I like and 12-key it, by itself or as a pattern, apply it to some tunes and not really think about the theory part unless i need to remember it later and write it down.
@pmartin54BB4 ай бұрын
01:16 - mind. blown
@jeffruzich68505 ай бұрын
Very good. Extremely professional and informative. You are a groovy teacher.
@pianomanenproceso4 ай бұрын
This might be one of the most important videos in the first steps of any improvisation studies. Thank you very much!
@rehacemsapmaz4 ай бұрын
its too hard to understand for me 😭😭
@Gnurklesquimp24 ай бұрын
@@rehacemsapmazthe simple version is you shift a pentatonic scale up and down in a way you like over the chord and as it connects to what came before/after. Of course, judging what you do and don't like is where it can get tricky. I would say the most fundamental lesson here is this: things like the pentatonic scale have a consonant and familiar structure to them, so we can do wacky stuff with it without devolving into noise. That sorta thinking goes into MANY techniques, like how complex sounding polychords are often just two simple triads that fit together in a weird way.
@rehacemsapmaz4 ай бұрын
@@Gnurklesquimp2 i feel like this video is not for starters someone need to guide me to start jazz im so lost in theory i play guitar btw
@Scratch19814 ай бұрын
As a guitar player this has been so informative. I have been using inside a little but now I understand it better. I got some practicing to do.
@bugno21 күн бұрын
Thank you for this amazing video. I have earned so much from it.
@kg_motion9156Ай бұрын
Great tutorial! Pls continue😊💙
@parkerpolen5 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great content, Nathan!
@brentwheeler20875 ай бұрын
Thanks - this sets out the basic tools very well and in an easy to follow manner. Then there are huge possibilities you have outlined here. Good one.
@colinburgess77284 ай бұрын
great information. playing outside sounds "righter" if you just use pentatonics and voice lead that i think will help a lot - many thanks
@MoodyKat4 ай бұрын
This video was very informative awesome teaching
@Gnurklesquimp24 ай бұрын
Note: in a sense, the typical inside harmonies can actually be outside depending on established context. Even if you were consistently using interchange before and suddenly go diatonic, that can be the part that feels outside, especially if you were avoiding some of those diatonic notes or at least their function in the diatonic part.
@bradsims51165 ай бұрын
I love this video ! Thank you so much !
@voronOsphere4 ай бұрын
Amazing, life changing tutorial! Subbed!
@Axel_1425Ай бұрын
This is great
@dmitrykomarov15895 ай бұрын
Please validate me whether I got the concept of 'shifting with the common tone' correct (10:15). So after the first bar where Bb- pentatonic was used we encounter a wide variety of possible pentatonics to use in the second bar. According to the principle mentioned, we may take each note of Bb- pentatonic and pick up all the pentatonics which share them. Those which share Bb tone: C-, F-, G-, Eb- Those which share Db tone: C#-, F#-, Ab-, Eb- Those which share Eb tone: Eb-, C-, F-, Ab- Those which share F tone: C-, D-, F-, G- Those which share Ab tone: F-, C#-, Ab-, Eb- Altogether we got 8 pentatonics: C-, C#-, D-, Eb-, F-, F#-, G-, Ab-. So did I get it right, that after each following bar we will again have a choice, but this time out of 8 OTHER possibilities? And so on
@pianomanenproceso4 ай бұрын
Yes, that’s pretty much it
@claytronico4 ай бұрын
i like your artwork.
@St3ph4n34 ай бұрын
Excellent! Awesome! Thank you!
@tristanrussano11785 ай бұрын
Gold!
@ohad1575 ай бұрын
This is gold
@Lutemann5 ай бұрын
Wow, that was a good video. As someone who is working through the Jerry Coker Patterns book, I can see how all this works.
@TheZaneTeam5 ай бұрын
Good stuff!
@The3fingers4 ай бұрын
Dude...if you dont kick it in the music industry , you definitely can do it in an audio or video format...like a voice actor! Smooth! I subscribed for the music theory presented easily. ✌️
@agamhamzah29244 ай бұрын
Thank you so much this great lesson
@bobdeyoung72615 ай бұрын
I can't work on this kind of stuff for very long either. It would drive me nuts!
@brentwatts24803 ай бұрын
Why does actual chad look like the most chad person to ever chad
@caprioficial4 ай бұрын
COOL!
@whatilearnttoday52955 ай бұрын
Simple way a guitarist might look at this is dom7 chords a minor 3rd apart are all essentially the same. Diminished harmony stuff.
@billchavez84735 ай бұрын
This good, well presented, information. Thanks.
@billchavez84735 ай бұрын
I have to say; this is way better than I originally thought. I've got some practicing to do. Thanks again.
@christopherherrmann9215 ай бұрын
Good theme!
@JJaZZ-IIVI5 ай бұрын
Je suis guitariste, mais tout est très bien expliqué et transposable à tous les instruments J'aurais tant aimé voir ce genre de vidéos quand j'étais jeune !...👍
@PascalM-ld9xn4 ай бұрын
Pareil 🎸😉
@Carehuea4 ай бұрын
Awesome video, thank you…! Is the pentatonics course available in a bass clef version…?
@mrieksreosn27354 ай бұрын
This was an "ear-opener" from my side! I've always been looking for a way to expand upon my pentatonics, and now i have enough homework for a long time! This might be a dumb question, but is there a way to practise this as a bass player?
@3dspacecadet004 ай бұрын
The problem I have with jazz tutorials, either videos or books, is that ya’ll will use a chord as an example like a Major 7, and then add in other extensions. Like just say its a 9 chord? Before I had a really developed ear stuff like this would be really confusing.
@davidsummerville3514 ай бұрын
Great info, thanks, liked and subscribed.
@elementsofphysicalreality5 ай бұрын
You can do the same thing but with the melodic minor scale based on the v.
@hectorzeronee5 ай бұрын
I get this easily on a theoretical level....it's the applicability that stumps. Practice practice
@matthewjohnloren19955 ай бұрын
Imagine if frank marino of mahogany rush learned this. Man's made a whole career using the the minor pentatonic scale
@giocoso45765 ай бұрын
imagine rock player learning music theory is wild
@alexgoldbergbass5 ай бұрын
Any chance you have a bass clef version of this?
@drewnelson86925 ай бұрын
Thank God I play a concert pitch instrument, while it might be a pain in the ass (I have no clue how to do that) don't underestimate the value of transposing this music into bass clef yourself. Happy musicing!
@dawnnwilliams29465 ай бұрын
In jazz combo I asked for a bass clef version and was told to learn to read treble clef. I thought that was so unfair because he gave Eb and Bb versions. Even though it’s just shifting everything up I still find it hard. Full disclosure I’m not that great at reading bass clef….
@Jamesdavenelson4 ай бұрын
I recognise the irealpro app piano
@skylee50295 ай бұрын
I'm just a Bass player, but enjoyed the lesson anyways
@tbonealex5 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t the chord/scale for CMA7 be C Lydian?
@tbonealex5 ай бұрын
D pentatonic over CMaj7 is not “outside”
@sabaca3044 ай бұрын
Either the I or a IV can be a Maj7 in a major Scale so in a vacuum it can be viewed as either Ionian or Lydian. At 2:30 he defines it as the I chord, so in context it is C Ionian (= C Major Scale) here
@joel64275 ай бұрын
I have often noticed very good sax players teaching techniques, like this fellow who, while demonstrating an exercise, read the lines and wondered what the process is that leads to off-paper fluency. Am I making a big mistake by trying to memorize practice room lines like he is playing at @7:50, getting frustrated, and never following through?
@magohipnosis5 ай бұрын
you should memorize the degrees of the scale you're playing so you won't have to follow the page but rather what you understood. 1 b3 4 b7 5 4 b3 1.
@rockallknight4 ай бұрын
Do people really use this ? This is so much to think about, is this really what jazz greats are thinking about ? And also a key question would be rules of thumb for what outside pentatonic to play over what chords?
@vullnetdyla4 ай бұрын
People don’t think about all this stuff when they improvise. At least not in terms of letters or visual diagrams. Can’t remember which one of the greats said something like: forget your complicated scales and chords, it’s just a sound man! I love theory and use it a lot to analyze a song so I know what will sound good. Music has too many possibilities that sound weird if you don’t constrain with some rules. But the way I understand the greats play is: know the rules, know the song (which is a subset of the rules), practice, and when it’s time to play, you let go of the framework and feel it, groove with it. The rules and the song become baked into your muscle memory and you get to direct what happens at a high level without thinking about all the details. You also choose moments where you break the rules, or maybe “move off the beaten path”. To walk off the beaten path, you either have to signal the rest of the band to give you space, so that your playing can sound good carrying most of the emotion, you plan it all together, or you plan an alternate route to resolution in advance that doesn’t throw the band off. This is how I think of it at least, and I’m no pro. I’ve just heard or read about how pros think. I’m sure there are pros that approach things differently.
@thegeeeeeeeeee4 ай бұрын
Yes. great players think about all this stuff, a million times over, until it becomes a subconscious tool for self expression. Sky is the limit, and maybe even the sky wont stop true creatives
@dbay94084 ай бұрын
Pat Martino, has a whole book on this idea. Using relative pentatonics to improvise over Jazz chord changes. Some even refer to it as the Pat Martino Method! Jazz players and classical players learn all relationships via chords scales and chromatics. They are the 'geeks' of the music world. That's why they're so musically versatile. Jazz players practice these concepts again and again until they become part of their vocabulary. But you have to understand music is relative in most cases. A guitar player might just learn the shapes and how to use them over the changes, then apply those changes and shapes to the 12+ keys. Different musicians will have different approaches. But the bottom line is practice....practice....practice.
@JamesW-li5oi4 ай бұрын
the idea is to learn it so well you don't have to think about it, like learning to drive so you can get around faster. after a while you're not thinking about operating the car anymore, you're just doing it while your mind is on more important things. with jazz it's like getting the mechanics mastered so you can express your inner self on a higher level, and you can drop back into "theory thinking" anytime just like you can go back to focusing on your pedals and steering while driving. but the point is to transcend the theory.
@hubdecassis5 ай бұрын
👍
@PascalM-ld9xn4 ай бұрын
You can create chords with pentatonics, on guitar i like playing pentatonic chords shifting 😂🎸🎶🎵
@jacekr26554 ай бұрын
A Black preacher with some pure common sense!
@JamesW-li5oi4 ай бұрын
and that's unusual? 🧐
@LandonAlaric4 ай бұрын
I like the F major pentatonic whilst in C major 😢
@bobblues11585 ай бұрын
Transcribe Woody Shaw.
@moserdp4 ай бұрын
@jazzlessonvideos, In the example on the screen at the 23 second mark, how is that a F# pentatonic with an A natural? The notes are actually an A pentatonic...
@hvcoolАй бұрын
PatrickMahomes
@rift38294 ай бұрын
Donn Lee??? donna lee :)
@Stevie_D_Pre5 ай бұрын
“This technique where we shift pentatonics is know as pentatonic shifting” 😂 idk why I found that so funny
@mojoemurphy4 ай бұрын
Well, guess I'll go burn my instruments now
@williampennell85675 ай бұрын
Didn't know Patrick Mahomes knew his theory
@8393Robertrex4 ай бұрын
Regular musical motion done via the pentatonic scale. Instead of chords you do parts of scales. And you choose via which sounds best to you. You do this all the time probably, just never so bluntly. Like you could replace any part with Phrygian, but it will be "tighter" because the intervals are closer and there's more notes to go through, Honestly you're only using pentatonics to keep that space between the notes. You don't even have to Heck, this is just how you do chords. But with something else.
@allever97795 ай бұрын
Now I know why everyone sounds the same today
@brianwolle25094 ай бұрын
i love your comment!!! i was thinking the same thing for years
@pjbpiano4 ай бұрын
Everyone sounded the same during Parker's time. Same before that.
@JamesW-li5oi4 ай бұрын
there's very few true originals, and a near infinite number of imitators.
@FarsansTorraOrdvitsar5 ай бұрын
Nice video. Too advanced for me... At some point, it becomes a competition of bending musical technicality that it no longer sounds pleasing.. I mean, it's not noise or bad sounding it's not as harmonically pleasing as a sleek solo by Michael Brecker. Same as some people might prefer a Slayer dissonant guitar solo over a Mark Knopfler solo.. 😇
@douglange68635 ай бұрын
Coltrane did pentatonic shifting. Michael Brecker emulated Coltrane with pentatonic shifting. Brecker’s genius was how he could use pentatonic shifting to weave in and out of the harmonic structure with blazingly quick, fluid melodies. The etudes are not meant to be “solos” but are used to develop technique and the ear to use pentatonic shifting in a creative way.
@giocoso45765 ай бұрын
Nah nothing’s stopping you from sounding good with a particular musical tool. ie skill issue
@whatilearnttoday52955 ай бұрын
> I mean, it's not noise or bad sounding it's not as harmonically pleasing as a sleek solo by Michael Brecker. It's literally a harmonic technique he uses all the time. > Slayer dissonant guitar solo What is dissonant about Slayer? Your idea of what sounds dissonant will shift as you experience more harmony.
@markdenton80273 ай бұрын
The answer is... awful 🙂
@Stevestevestevestevestevesteve4 ай бұрын
It's that sound that it terrible to the ears 😅😅😅
@StanleyKubick14 ай бұрын
Can't hear you
@Alexxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx874 ай бұрын
Bunch of bs 😅
@hubdecassis5 ай бұрын
This is too much complicate, so so complex. Your language and tricks are only for the pro, not for common players. When we listen to you, the only thing we want to do is to put the sax in the trash, because it is impossible to do your exercices, your advices, etc . Simple players are not able to reproduce what you say
@qhs37115 ай бұрын
Get to practicing!
@Saxologic5 ай бұрын
Can definitely make more beginner/intermediate-friendly content in the near future. Thanks for your input :)
@ohad1575 ай бұрын
Cope
@alejandrosoza80065 ай бұрын
Bro is hopeless 💀
@DaDarkGuy5 ай бұрын
you're looking for the wrong tutorials then
@JamesW-li5oiАй бұрын
It just doesn't sound good to me. This is where jazz took a wrong turn imo 🫤