Play Happy Jazz & Blues Piano with This!
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- čas přidán 13. 06. 2024
- ► Get your FREE Top 5 Piano Tips Guide:
pianowithjonny.com/top-5-tips/
► Download this Quick Tip lesson sheet and backing track:
pianowithjonny.com/piano-less...
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LESSON SUMMARY
Would you like to play bebop blues piano in the style of Oscar Peterson or Bud Powell? This happy-go-lucky piano sound bears the influence of bebop era harmony and phrasing on the traditional blues form. In today's Quick Tip, you'll learn to play bebop blues piano in 3 steps. In fact, you can get this jazzy blues piano sound with just 5 left hand chords and 6 right hand notes! You'll learn:
-12-Bar Bebop Blues Progression
-5 Jazzy Rootless Voicings
-2 Grips on the Major Blues Scale
► Jazzy Blues Comping course:
pianowithjonny.com/courses/ja...
Chapters:
00:00 - Intro
01:00 - Step 1: Blues Chords
03:42 - Step 2: Bebop Progression
05:14 - Play with backing track
06:10 - Step 3: Major Blues Scale
07:25 - A Grip
08:56 - Play with backing track
10:03 - Eb Grip
11:27 - Play with backing track
12:12 - Combine grips with backing track
12:45 - Conclusion
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Happy practicing!
Jonny May
00:00 - Intro
01:00 - Step 1: Blues Chords
03:42 - Step 2: Bebop Progression
05:14 - Play with backing track
06:10 - Step 3: Major Blues Scale
07:25 - A Grip
08:56 - Play with backing track
10:03 - Eb Grip
11:27 - Play with backing track
12:12 - Combine grips with backing track
12:45 - Conclusion
This channel is a freakin' miracle. The total amount of skills we can learn by all of those lessons would cost a TON of money elsewhere.
Seriously, great job.
Thank you!
This is the best music lesson I had ever seen
Maybe your best lesson. This Oscar Peterson things explained by you are amazing!!! We need more!!! Thanks!
I love this Johnny Guy. Best Man. I alread wrote a Song with a Chord Progression learned by Johnny;)
Thank you Jonny you are good thank you thank you here from Aalborg Denmark you are blessing many who wants to learn smart piano playing🎹📖🙏
The best lesson of all time🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹🎹
You're killin' me !!!
Thanks for the tips Jonny, you rock!
Its taken me about two weeks to learn that intro. What a sweet little jam. Thanks
Hai Johny, thanks, it’s a great lesson, it’s easy to understand yet easy to apply. Please keep being a blessing for piano players. God bless you
Johnny may hail brother your piano teaching is a gift from the lord
I love your lessons all the time. So great.
I got helped from you a lot.
I may take your lessons soon.
Thank you ❤❤
Thank You Jonny!!! Very beautiful pleasant and useful for me.
You are a gifted teacher, Jonny. Not to mention a very accomplished pianist. Thank you for brightening my day.
FC from Thailand
Thank you so much Jonny.. You are really a good teacher 👍
amazing
Johnny you are great, you answered all my questions as I’m learning to play. Your very patient, wise, talented and I’ve learned better from you than anyone. You are my best mentor, thanks so much for giving your gifts back on you tube. Would love to meet you one day
Ypur the best teacher brother Johnny , so easy to understand , simple , so clear, all we need is to practise and memorize ... thank you so m7ch and may God bless you more..
Thank you
Holy s---t,thanks for the amazing lesson!
Thank's Jonny ! Steven from Montreal Canada
Good Job, My teacher. Thanks You for they video.
Great stuff jonny
Really very nice. cant wait to learn this on my own.
very nice.tnx a lot
amazing! thank you
Your lessons are just awesome. Thank you!
Another excellent lesson. Well paced and easy to follow. Using slides, turns, and drone notes makes the improv sound even more cool.
great lesson! Thanks!
You Sir are a Godsend
Awesome lesson. I’ve got work to do. TY
I found the "grips" and the extensions (like the D7 flat 9) to be very helpful, because, ALTHOUGH I know "of" these things, using them in context escapes me oftentimes.
Exactly!
Très belle présentation. Simple et très efficace
Thanks Jonny, this is amazing. You deserve all the best from this channel.
Yea ✌🏻😎 Jonny... amazing
SUPER HELPFUL - Thanks man! This'll make a big difference any time I sit down and on my Gig this Saturday B) Thanks!
awesome!
Thank you so much, very interesting, fully and analized by details!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge of music. Very professional. I like your videos teaching. I can learnedly from you for sure. I need to practice more especially the song, " The Bare Necessities. Very nice of you!
Thanx, Jonny 🌹🔥🔥🌹
Super fun thank you! Otherwise I was stuck with my minor blues scale what's always sounds sad 😂
This is some AWESOME, AMAZING stuff .....explained in a way that's easily understood!!! Luv it Jonny!!
Awesome, thank you!
Great, great quick tips.... it's always a plessure to watch your vids.
I have more and more pleasure to play and I'll be as good as you in 20 years, but only if you cut your two arms!
Thanks so much
interesting
Boogie
In the intro you’re playing all kinds of grace notes and right hand cords to make it sound extra tasty but in the lesson you only do one note right hand stuff. It would be great if you explained how to make is sound so tasty.
This idea of working with "Grips" is key to good melodic development. How would you apply the concept of using "Grips" to the I-VI-II-V or III-VI-II-V progressions? Do the 5 or 6 notes chosen change when the cord type changes? In what other song forms does using a "Grip" work to the improvisor's advantage? Limiting our options is often the answer. We can't all be Bud Powell.
If the answers I seek are already covered on your site, just tell me where on your site I need to go.
Hey Georgory, you can view additional PWJ Quick Tips covering "grips" at the following link:
pianowithjonny.com/?s=grips&fwp_content_type=quick_tip
Hey Jonny can you learn one of tom brier's songs? Like balderdash or blue lampshade
Ok but why do you look exactly like Ralph Fiennes? 😍
2:13 cheeky #5
The alteration choices seem important for the sound. Every dominant chord has a different alteration. Should probably mark them in the chord symbols…
Why is it D7 rather than D-7, which would yield a standard II-V-I?
Using secondary dominants V/V - V - I is also a super standard cadence.
So where do I signup
pianowithjonny.com/
❤❤❤🙏🙏🙏😮😮😮
I can't keep up. I'm still looking for the keys to press. He's moved on to the 5th set of notes already. Hmmm. Looks easy but it is not. This just makes me realise I'm still a beginner. How do you remember what to play? No piano teacher ever explains this.
So what was the point of crossing the hands to play the root note at the beginning of the video??
To help you hear the bass note conception. The bass note changes the feel of a chord in a "kaleidoscopic" way. Example: Play a C major chord on Middle C, root position, and play a C one octave below it, then play the same chord and try the Bb a ninth below middle C, then the A just below that Bb. THUS: The same chord sounds a bit different depending upon the Bass Note, hence my use of the term "kaleidoscoopic." So Jonny wanted you to hear the ROOT of each of these rootless voicings. If you'd like, play the roots in octaves in the left hand, and play the chords in the right hand, and this will help to ground your ears in a "basic" bebop blues progression. I'm hoping that Jonny will agree with my assessment. And besides, you REALLY should know the same shapes in each hand to increase your fluency, eh?
Because the bass note in this song is not played by the pianist but by the bass player, so this hack lets you hear the full chord without having the bass player or backing track.
Isn't a C7add9 simply a C9?
You've done it again. You show a notated D# and call it an Eb. Why you do this?? Do you have any idea how confusing this is for someone who is just learning how to write and read music?? I love what you are doing otherwise.
The Eb is what a music teacher would call it but the D# is what the automatic notation software calls it.