TILF Barry Harris EP 52 A Very Important Arpeggio

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • / tilfbarryharris
    This is the Fifty Second in several episodes discussing the things i've learned from Barry Harris I started studying with Barry in 1993 and still learn from his teaching every day. I hope I can use this channel to help other musicians who are interested in Jazz but find it a little too cerebral. I think Barry's method, while being cerebral, is also direct and most important beautiful. Please Subscribe and feel free to comment below on how I can improve this channel I'm available for skype lessons if you prefer. Email me at chrisparksjazz22@gmail.com

Komentáře • 40

  • @jamesrobinson529
    @jamesrobinson529 Před 4 lety +8

    Barry's method is definitely a rut breaker. This is so inspiring!

  • @PedroSilvaMusic
    @PedroSilvaMusic Před 3 lety +5

    After 30 years of playing, your channel has launched me into a novice again. Amazing content. Thank you for doing these lessons.

  • @azomyte
    @azomyte Před 4 lety +11

    Thank you Chris for keeping this channel going and for passing all this on

  • @avantagonist
    @avantagonist Před 4 lety +7

    Yo this channel is a gold mine thank you so much

  • @chasemcclendon9659
    @chasemcclendon9659 Před 8 měsíci

    If I can sound like you learning this, then it’s what I have to do. I love this sound, what an amazing system Barry created

  • @kubilay1839
    @kubilay1839 Před 4 lety +4

    Awesome commentary awesome pharasing . I am glad that subscribed this channel. Looking forward to see more videos. Peace.

  • @TypingHazard
    @TypingHazard Před 4 lety +1

    Always good to see a new video, and on a snow day no less.

  • @44y4l4
    @44y4l4 Před 3 lety +3

    love what u said about Bach and Chopin, it's 100% correct. The classical piano mafia sucks.

  •  Před 4 lety +1

    Always so good, thanks :)

  • @buckjofiden4804
    @buckjofiden4804 Před rokem

    Awesome
    This lesson is full of great concepts. I’ll be spending a lot of time on this.
    Thanks so much 🍻🇦🇺

  • @decincotres
    @decincotres Před 4 lety +3

    Keep up the excellent work! This is some outstanding jazz education.

  • @pitullo70
    @pitullo70 Před 4 lety +1

    Pure Gold

  • @TheDave292
    @TheDave292 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks, Chris. This is a great supplement to our recent lesson. I was not focusing enough on the inversions of the arpeggios and now understanding that the V of the original key acts as a “tritone trigger” for new material...THAT is a quantum leap!

  • @mauropala7758
    @mauropala7758 Před 3 lety

    Amazing lesson!

  • @user-mj5le9zw6i
    @user-mj5le9zw6i Před 4 lety +6

    Thanks a lot!
    In my opinion, Barry is most interesting and striking jazz musician in America!
    Hi from Saint-Petersburg! =)

  • @efrenhei4902
    @efrenhei4902 Před 3 lety

    Thank you, greetings from Argentina

  • @sega62s
    @sega62s Před 2 lety

    I got trouble focusing on your theory when I hear the sound and see your gear, gee…..you got the best stuff that money can buy 🥰🍻🍻🍻

  • @Joobie
    @Joobie Před 4 lety

    Great vid.

  • @judahroused1168
    @judahroused1168 Před 3 lety

    Real talk

  • @Ntimitree
    @Ntimitree Před 4 lety

    Things I kept...in case of a major 2-5-1 you can improvise using two major scales a semitone apart. Thanks!

  • @mlabash
    @mlabash Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you so much for your videos. They are so helpful for those of use who are trying to deepen our understanding of Barry's teachings. I have a question about Barry's "genealogy" of chords: if I'm not mistaken his theory accounts for 20 different chords. Arrived at, or course, by raising and lowering combinations of 1 or 2 notes of the diminished. I tried raising and lowering 3 notes of the diminished and found 8 more chords! 4 dominants and 4 minor 6th's! Can this be right? Or does the changing of 3 notes somehow alter the "chemistry" of the diminished? I would love to know your thoughts. Thanks very much!

  • @alexd.alessandro5419
    @alexd.alessandro5419 Před 4 lety

    I have a question about adding scale notes, do we think from C maj or E Dom 7?
    Many thanks!

  • @tadasuyamato930
    @tadasuyamato930 Před 3 lety

    Your video is worth as joe pass jazz line video ! One things when you play Tritons things without chord truck is much effect less.

  • @alexd.alessandro5419
    @alexd.alessandro5419 Před 4 lety

    Sorry, I meant to ask, from the Cmaj scale for the added notes, for example F instead of F# or from the D7, the 5 chord which of course is diatonic?

  • @danielbarry5547
    @danielbarry5547 Před 4 lety +1

    Just got a Tele myself, been using daddario chromes on a strat for a while. Having trouble choosing chromes or nyxl's for the tele. What kind of strings you use?

  • @saxofonistacr
    @saxofonistacr Před 3 lety

    thanks for all the info you are giving and makeing i t accesible, other videos of Harry himself talking about some of this concepts are hard to undestand, maybe because are fragments.
    Just a comment that might help your awesome contribution to be a fraction better, In most of your videos your guitar is too loud compared to your voice. Thanks for all this videos

  • @dotankafkafi7116
    @dotankafkafi7116 Před 4 lety

    Trying to understand how C-E-G-C arpeggio is used on Ebm-D7-Db [~9:56]:
    E and G of the arpeggio are dissonant to Eb and Gb in the Ebm chord.
    This doesn't sound well.

  • @donngoodside6885
    @donngoodside6885 Před 4 lety

    Chris ___ Your episode updates, 'end up' in my, "SPAM" folder. How can I correct?Donn ____

    • @jazura2
      @jazura2 Před 2 lety

      He's teaches music!
      You need someone to show you how to mark it as 'not spam'

  • @Tom_Het
    @Tom_Het Před 3 lety

    So Barry says don't think about the ii chord (A C E G), but then he says think about the V chord but start using the triad on the seventh note of the V chord.
    That's a convoluted way of saying to think about the IV chord (C E G) which as you descend inevitably gives you the A. So why does he act like he's not thinking about the ii chord and then tell you to think about the ii chord?
    This seems like a hard and fast tool for this specific change. You could probably make similar strategies like this for every other change. Like you could probably say "ah when I see the Five-One I just think the One, but I make sure to start my line on the triad built on the 7th note" and this would give the exact same results as this strategy for the ii-V because it's the exact same idea.

    • @MrThepopopopo
      @MrThepopopopo Před rokem

      The ii is just the chord found on the fith degree of the dominant. You're the one connecting the C Major arpeggio to the ii, not Barry's method. The movement spelled out with the dominant root is
      D9sus D7 GMaj

  • @LarrySiden
    @LarrySiden Před 3 lety

    When you pay an arp on the 7th of a dominant, it will sound suspended. That's fine if that's what you're going for, but it won't sound Dom without the lead tone F#

    • @evelyncharlottejoe4238
      @evelyncharlottejoe4238 Před 3 lety +2

      the point though, for the sake of lines, is to hear what it sounds like to resolve that in different ways. II-7 is a IV6 with a 6 in the bass. because barry thinks of a 2/5 as just 5 when talking about lines, playing that arpegio and resolving it to 5 is the same as playing the IV (or the II)

  • @noisyneil
    @noisyneil Před 4 lety

    I really love your playing and it's amazing that you make this information available.
    Just wondered: what does BH mean by "important" regarding those three arps?
    *1, 3, 5, 7*
    2, 4, 6, 1
    3, 5, 7, 9
    4, 6, 1, 3
    *5, 7, 9, 11*
    6, 1, 3, 5
    *7, 2, 4, 6*
    I notice that all three contain the 7th. Is that considered important in that it colours each arpeggio with the dominant flavour? I'm wondering why the arpeggio starting from the 3rd isn't part of that list, as then you'd have four arps, each containing the 7th, that increase in colour (i.e. number of extensions).

    • @brothercaleb
      @brothercaleb Před 4 lety

      noisyneil - always “flat” 7th as this is on dominant chord. 🍻

    • @noisyneil
      @noisyneil Před 4 lety

      Well yes, obviously. I was talking about scale degrees.

  • @YellowJello57
    @YellowJello57 Před 4 měsíci

    Voice level is very low in this ep compared to the guitar