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I mentioned the fingerings because you change them most of the time when you play a neighboring tone. Instead of stretching to the next string below, you move your hand back and forth out of the current pattern. This will create a series of problems down the road when the approach note concepts get more complex.
Thanks Pete, it’s an improvement over the first one! If you can, please download the newest version of the Lesson book from the dashboard. On p.36 there is a new Rhythm Templates checklist you can go through which will help you find some details you can improve.
My only concern is your fingerings. I’m curious to know why you are not using the ones prescribed?
Thanks David for alerting me! I will have them corrected and should post an updated version of Workbook 2 soon.
Unfortunately you are sending me a transcription with no notation of the intervals and the approach note concepts prescribed, which is what truly matters here. Therefore I have no clue how you are thinking in terms of both approach and target notes. When you put it in regular notation, it becomes key dependent and it is much harder to see the underlying melodic structure at first glance without going into heavy, time consuming analysis which requires constantly having to refer to the original RT.
I think you might be missing the point of the concept. The idea is to simply do the assignment in the provided RTs and then just read the intervallic script. If you are reading TAB, you won’t learn how to think in intervals and apply the concepts to improvise which the RTs help mentally train you for.
Hi Pete,
Thanks for posting!
I looked at your attachment and watched the video. Now, I don’t mean to sound harsh but your RT has many errors! Sorry, but too many to go into detail here. All I can suggest is that you go back over the fundamentals such as proper voice leading at the point of chord change and use of guide tones. Also, your note choices are poor in the development of the solos overall flow. Furthermore some of your fingerings are wrong. That said, I wouldn’t practice this in all fingerings as you would only be reinforcing lots of bad habits.Again, I don’t want to sound discouraging but I feel you could use some “one on one” guidance to go over all the details you might be misunderstanding.
Yes, the inclusion of the II-V is probably the most basic transition from traditional blues to jazz blues.
As far as borrowing from a parallel minor key goes, this is a practice that was introduced by the classical composers a long time ago. In jazz we call it “modal interchange”. I explain it in detail in VOL 2 after covering minor tonalities.Secondary dominants and tritone substitutes are not borrowed from parallel minor keys. They are non diatonic compositional devices, again introduced centuries ago (eg. Bach) in order to create added “tension and resolve”and harmonic movement within an otherwise diatonic major tonality.
They can be used anywhere as long as they don’t clash with a written melody. Usually they are added before a resolution, a half measure before.
Glad you figured it out! 🙂
I think you are taking this out of the context of the specific given exercise and misinterpreting it. This instruction on p.53 is only for the given set of rhythms and specific framework so that the resolutions will work and so that the approach will always fall on one of the included 8th notes and not one of the larger values.
Hi Kurt,
Actually there is for all chord-scale relationship. I am slowly working on a chord melody method, where this concept is key. It will include all the chord-scale relationships. However, for now the best I can recommend is that you maybe try to alter the 7 mixolydian patterns by just raising the 4th a half step in each fingering, and for the related dominant chords, just lowering the 5th a half step down.
Hope this helps…
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This reply was modified 4 years, 5 months ago by
Richie.
Sorry, I didn’t know you were referring to the video. I just checked it, and you are right… I did play what you said. Thanks for pointing that out! You are the first one to notice that error after 5 years of having published it! At least someone is paying attention.:)
I will probably correct the written portion, as it is much harder to redo the video.
No error, it is correct! It’s a 3 note enclosure resolving to C. G# and A can’t be the lower portion of the enclosure to C. The lower in this case has to be a double chromatic approach because the upper is a single diatonic approach. Please review p.79 in the lesson book for definition and examples of 3 note enclosures.
Downloads are right under the 1st and last video.
This is interval script which can be applied to any key. The top paragraph on p.7 refers you to p.20 in the Lesson Book, for an explanation of interval script. Also make sure you watch the corresponding videos
including those for the exercises.
In a nutshell, the purpose of intervallic script is to train you to think in terms of interval patterns over any scale, instead of notes. We don’t have time to think in notes when we improvise…only numerical patterns that represent the sound and their specific location within each of the fingerings. The entire course is built and based on this concept.I’m not sure what you are referring to as there are no links included or description…
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This reply was modified 4 years, 5 months ago by
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