⏰What can we can do with 10 minutes of arpeggio practice❓

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 87

  • @dougclarkson69
    @dougclarkson69 Před hodinou

    Yes like the guided practice.

  • @sashasilin3463
    @sashasilin3463 Před rokem +3

    So simple, yet incredibly effective. Very grateful for this.

  • @choochoochooseyou
    @choochoochooseyou Před 3 měsíci +3

    Love this. Deserves many more likes.

  • @Kebbius
    @Kebbius Před rokem +3

    One of the best lesson I've ever seen. Thank you.

  • @LukeFoo1975
    @LukeFoo1975 Před 2 lety +7

    This exercise taught me how to start playing solo guitar back when I started jazz at a conservatory
    Great exercise 👍

  • @billmiller9763
    @billmiller9763 Před 2 lety +3

    Like this practice exercise. 1. I need to buy a looper, ha ha . 2. Singing with the notes is a secret of the masters. Doing it helps me play better, puts the music in my head making us play better ( me and the guitar) . This understanding will show us our music problems may not be guitar and amp. And more tips like these.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před 2 lety

      Cheers for the comment Bill. I couldn’t agree more re singing. It takes us away from guitar ways of thinking. I might do a ten minutes with each month going forward.

  • @stuartarnold4495
    @stuartarnold4495 Před 2 lety +2

    Not so scared of arpeggio practice. Good lesson I seem to have had a light bulb moment with this lesson. Thank you Andy.

  • @jazz1146
    @jazz1146 Před měsícem +1

    Great lesson!

  • @Cuardaitheoirfirinne
    @Cuardaitheoirfirinne Před rokem +3

    This was spectacular. One of the best you've done. Thank you so much. More of these and your Mick Goodrick series. Thank you again Andy.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the feedback. Out of interest, what about this particular video is helpful? (good to know for future planning)

    • @Cuardaitheoirfirinne
      @Cuardaitheoirfirinne Před rokem

      @@jazzguitarwithandy Using the song's chord progression with a specific rhythm pattern on each measure makes the exercise a lot more musical. I have been using the Solo app which is great but is focused on learning the fretboard and interval relationships. I liked this exercise because there is the added element of working on rhythm, timing, and inversions. I would also say that it reminded me to sing the arpeggio before playing it which is also very key.

  • @JosephusDalrymple
    @JosephusDalrymple Před 2 lety +2

    Thoughtful lesson. Thank you.

  • @VitalBigras
    @VitalBigras Před 2 lety +2

    GREAT exercise!!!

  • @annettesomers7463
    @annettesomers7463 Před 2 lety +2

    Great lesson thank you. Really helpful I'm grateful ☺

  • @salvadorgarcia8661
    @salvadorgarcia8661 Před 2 lety +2

    Excelente lección. Muchas gracias maestro.

  • @watski
    @watski Před rokem +2

    Excellent as always. The hardest part is moving from tick like and scrolling to the next ‘the only scale you’ll ever need to play Jazz’ video to actually picking up the guitar. We have to DO THE WORK ourselves. Thanks again for sharing your ideas. Best, Ian

  • @satchrules101
    @satchrules101 Před rokem +2

    Amazing lesson. Very well explained!

  • @giraffe_giraffe
    @giraffe_giraffe Před 2 lety +2

    Great practice ideas, thanks!

  • @jwvcchess
    @jwvcchess Před 2 lety +1

    This is very helpful.

  • @alfiesolomon3531
    @alfiesolomon3531 Před rokem +1

    So glad you popped up on my feeds. I was looking exactly for that kind of video : straight up raw arpeggios practice. Most channels don't necessarily do that and prefer to get to the point, which is great. But it is sometimes blurry in terms of applications to know what is effective to do and what is not, how to properly practice stuff, etc... considering most viewers are self taught and don't necessarily have a clear structured routine other than the one they create for themselves. Thank you

  • @tomrechsteiner4715
    @tomrechsteiner4715 Před rokem +1

    cool lesson, nice guitar

  • @otmanblues4138
    @otmanblues4138 Před rokem +2

    Great lesson, Andy!! It is amazing how much you can fit into 10 minutes. This is an eye opener. Currently following your Blue Bossa lessons.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před rokem

      Thanks for the feedback. Hope the Blue Bossa practice is going well.

    • @otmanblues4138
      @otmanblues4138 Před rokem

      Andy, these beginner level tutorials are great. As a 71 yo learner, I’m pretty self directed. I started 12 months and was find my way around what type of music I like and who I could learn from. I feel like a 12 month old guitarist and have a long way to go.
      You are of the teachers I like because of your discipline and the practical advice you offer. I have learnt the melody to Blue Bossa and Black Orpheus, but my challenge is learning how to be able to improvise to the tunes. This lesson shows how to practice the Arpeggios to the chords, which what I need. So more lessons like this one would be much appreciated.
      Btw. As a data analyst, have done a survey of your audience? Age group categories, how long they have been playing the guitar, experience level with the fretboard, chord changes, etc… One online guitar teacher did a survey of his audience were Mostly interested in Blues and folk singer/songwriter tunes, that’s what he focussed on.
      I know I need work of becoming more familiar with Jazz chords, and arpeggios.

    • @otmanblues4138
      @otmanblues4138 Před rokem

      After watching video last night, I decided do 10 minutes practice learning the Arpeggios. The first 10 minutes were excruciating but I was patient with myself knowing that I was making progress. After 10 minutes were up, I decided to give myself another 10 minutes to consolidated what had just learn. This time the Arpeggios were flowing a bit better. I wanted to keep going but decided to have a bit of a break and come back to it again later in the day.
      I also said which chord arpeggio I was about to play so that I could connect the arpeggio to the chord.
      This is a great exercise and takes very little to learn from scratch with just 10 minutes of focussed learning and patience. Thank you Andy!👍🙏
      More lessons like this one please. 🙏

  • @the-lonely-ous1767
    @the-lonely-ous1767 Před rokem +1

    that was fire!

  • @frankvaleron
    @frankvaleron Před 2 lety +2

    Nice! If you combine the second last and the last idea you get the Charlie Parker thing of a leading note from a half step below on the 4& and then a triplet arpeggio from the third

  • @dlgm161
    @dlgm161 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Andy - just finishing a 🌞 holiday abroad - can't wait to get home to practice this!

  • @SuspiciousActivity871
    @SuspiciousActivity871 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is exactly what I needed!

  • @NFSundrgrnd
    @NFSundrgrnd Před rokem +1

    Saving this one for later!

  • @sega62s
    @sega62s Před rokem +1

    very useful , thx, and i need that guitar it really is awesome, sound is so pure.🎉

  • @matthewcasey892
    @matthewcasey892 Před rokem +1

    Beautiful! And tone was lovely.

  • @phretbord
    @phretbord Před 2 lety +2

    Great lesson here on one of the best standards ever written and adapted to guitar! Fun stuff for sure Andy! 😊🎼🎸👍

  • @tonycoldwell5418
    @tonycoldwell5418 Před rokem +1

    Another brilliant lesson!!

  • @petercontarino646
    @petercontarino646 Před rokem +1

    Well done Andy thanks. Really smart practice.

  • @outinacornfield
    @outinacornfield Před 2 lety +2

    Just great, Andy! Many thanks! Serendipity, because this week I have once again been trying to memorize the progression of ATYA and was looking for tips on how at least to practice arpeggios through it. I particularly like all your arpeggio videos.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před 2 lety

      It’s nice when it works out that way. Hope the practice goes well 😎

  • @TJ-fc1zz
    @TJ-fc1zz Před 2 lety +2

    Very cool! I look forward to trying this out. I just subbed to you recently and so far I am really enjoying your content. I am finding a lot of useful things from you. Good work!

  • @Lomoholga2
    @Lomoholga2 Před rokem +1

    Hey- thanks to this I have made a personal breakthrough on the guitar!!!

  • @ralphsefike5010
    @ralphsefike5010 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a great lesson.

  • @giusf1226
    @giusf1226 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Andy, nice as usual...! a good idea guided drill. What I usually do with this video is to download them and play along in a DAW (reaper in my case as it support videos) so that I can slow down and loop on specific parts.

  • @markgoodwin5306
    @markgoodwin5306 Před 2 lety +3

    This is kinda what I've been practicing and it's a challenge. For example, I have Autumn Leaves in my looper, shell voicings. I only let myself play chord tones and I have to make it interesting with phrasing. I'm just trying to make it sound really cool with chord tones only.

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před 2 lety +1

      It’s tough Mark. I think rhythm is the key to making it sounding interesting. Pivoting/octave displacement too.

    • @markgoodwin5306
      @markgoodwin5306 Před 2 lety

      @@jazzguitarwithandy It really is a challenge. Making it sound musical with emotion and feeling.

  • @outinacornfield
    @outinacornfield Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks

  • @wrtoomes600
    @wrtoomes600 Před 2 měsíci +1

    There is the new Telecaster.

  • @ZalMoxis
    @ZalMoxis Před 2 lety +2

    Lovely Tele. What are you using to loop the chords??

  • @dannybarcenas9701
    @dannybarcenas9701 Před 2 lety +1

    By singing the notes. Surely George Benson must have started that way

  • @jdavis6650
    @jdavis6650 Před 2 měsíci +2

    The real answer to the title question is N-O-T-H-I-N-G. To become good at anything requires dedication, hard work and patience. If you expect results in 10 minutes you should sell your guitar today,

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's just a CZcams title. It's more to help viewers see different ways to practice arpeggios that they might not have thought of before.

  • @seongchaelee694
    @seongchaelee694 Před rokem +1

    Since there are hundreds of possible positions for my finger to press, how do you determine what part of the guitar neck you would like to play arpeggios?
    For example, C maj 7 arpeggio on the 10th fret (E str) or 3rd fret (A str)?

    • @jazzguitarwithandy
      @jazzguitarwithandy  Před rokem

      I think it's good to develop the technique to be able to play that start note with any finger, that along with internalising the sound of the possibilities.