-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
-
11-30-2023 10:29 AM
-
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
He must have lost one.
Edit: A similar, new styled book still exists.
Six Essential Fingerings for the Jazz Guitarist (Book) by Jimmy Bruno.
-
I was inspired to make this thread through a lesson that in order to be a professional player repertoire becomes a very important part of one's practice (yeah stating the obvious). So from there I'm trying to base everything on going through tunes. Reading? Use the real book. Technique? Challenging Heads. etc etc. There are loads of stuff to work on but they're all centered around tunes.
Maybe there are better ways to go about practicing but rather than go for an illusive 'best way to spend time on the instrument' I'm just trying to see what works at this point. If I spend too much time thinking about the best way to practice I'll just end up not doing anything. Thankfully I have a teacher and I should get back to working things I've been taught so yeah.. have a good one everyone!
-
Scared another one off...
-
Originally Posted by GuyBoden
-
"The angels share" of the fretboard, I reckon
-
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
-
I don’t think it was CAGED +1. Anyway here they are from the No Nonsense Jazz Guitar booklet.
-
^ Not sure how those relate to Bruno’s five shapes, but I might be missing the context. These scales all appear to start on the root note, whereas the five shapes all start on some other note of the major scale, like modes, although Jimmy vociferously says they are not modes or scales but just shapes or positions.
-
Reading back here, I honestly don't see what's wrong with learning bebop heads if it serves to internalize phrasing and feel; it's eventually going to come out in your playing in terms of technique and rhythmic skills if done properly, right? No?
Also I don't see that pamosmusic is trying to come across as a badass player and have certainly heard worse versions of Solar (I saw the live one in YT) - maybe a case of mistaken identity, Reg?
-
- maybe a case of mistaken identity, Reg?
-
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett;[URL="tel:1301328"
-
Jimmy Bruno 6 Fingerings for Jazz Guitar.
Here they are on video.
-
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
I can’t rip the DVD and post the clip of him demonstrating it.
-
Originally Posted by AllanAllen
Whereas the five positions start on a different note of the scale each time. Just like modes.
-
Originally Posted by Kirk Garrett
Also I never got into Jimmy Bruno’s, thing so I have no idea of the timeline. But it’s also possible his terminology changed a bit later. Or it occurred to him to change the notation to better reflect his approach or whatever.
disclaimer: I didn’t go to UNT but my first jazz guitar teacher did and, golly gee, he was a task master.
-
My recollection of the ‘six fingerings’ book (I haven’t looked at it for a while) is that after going through the 6 major scale fingerings, Jimmy goes on to derive dorian and mixolydian scales from them (by starting from the relevant scale degrees), also possibly he gets into melodic minor and harmonic minor stuff too.
I think the basic idea is the 6 fingerings are designed so that all the other stuff can also be played out of them, with minimal adjustments.
I also have the video and as I recall it is similar, though maybe he covers less ground in it.
-
They don't "start" on a particular note - within each shape there's a highest and lowest note available. C major Shape 5 the lowest note is G third fret. Highest note would be A fifth fret. Jimmy used to get his students to send him a video of them playing the shapes from the lowest note to highest so, yeah, for that exercise you'd "start" on the G third fret. Of course, C shape 5 for C major is also a D dorian, E Phrygian shape etc but Jimmy's a GAS guy so Dm7-G7-C is just a C major pitch collection.
-
Originally Posted by morgan76
-
Originally Posted by pamosmusic
Also I never got into Jimmy Bruno’s, thing so I have no idea of the timeline. But it’s also possible his terminology changed a bit later. Or it occurred to him to change the notation to better reflect his approach or whatever.
disclaimer: I didn’t go to UNT but my first jazz guitar teacher did and, golly gee, he was a task master.
IIRC I worked the modal fingerings out on a sheet of paper as my parents drove me and my sister to Scotland iirc. I’d just been to my first jazz workshop and didn’t have a clue what people were talking about, but I’d read a couple of guitar magazines, so had an idea about the theory and the root to root thing. I was intrigued by the modes.
I figured it would stick better if I did the working out. I then played them when I got to a guitar (I think I may have tried to sing them too.)
I think that was a good idea, and I would recommend. I’ve never learned much in lectures, I always have to DO. The value of those Jimmy Bruno books etc to me is that you can check and compare.
Later I think I realised that the mode was all context dependent, not fingering dependent, and didn’t really worry about it. But I think the starting on the root thing may have helped me hear them for sure.
These days I wold recommend practicing every scale root to seventh Barry Harris style. It’s like the UNT system but keeps the 1 3 5 7 on the beat so it’s really clear. It’s tailor made for Chord Scale theory ironically haha.
I think guitar positions are too big for many situation, the smaller <1 octave shapes are much more useful for changes playing. I had to relearn scales because the Barry workshops kicked my but so much haha. And you can always hook them up to make bigger scales if needed.Last edited by Christian Miller; 12-01-2023 at 02:31 PM.
-
A great way I've found to practice rhythm and technique is transcribing solos and playing along with the record. Record yourself doing it and listen back very critically. It's kinda the same idea as learning heads. If you want to sound like the masters, learn to play what they play.
Also this all seems focused on technique and rhythm for linear playing, but I think learning to comp clear, connected rhythmic ideas is a weak spot for a lot of people (by which I mainly mean myself). Playing along with records can be helpful here too, I like to find horn trio standards albums. Locking in white a rhythm section while comping is a lot more rhythmically demanding than soloing, at least for me.
-
IIRC I worked the modal fingerings out on a sheet of paper as my parents drove me and my sister to Scotland iirc.
These days I wold recommend practicing every scale root to seventh Barry Harris style. It’s like the UNT system but keeps the 1 3 5 7 on the beat so it’s really clear. It’s tailor made for Chord Scale theory ironically haha.
I think guitar positions are too big for many situation, the smaller <1 octave shapes are much more useful for changes playing. I had to relearn scales because the Barry workshops kicked my but so much haha. And you can always hook them up to make bigger scales if needed.
Anyway .... he taught me the CAGED shapes first, though I don't think he called them that. Then he had these great exercises for bouncing around between them which I still use with students and stuff (one called "hop-scotching" which is brutal). Then three-note-per-string scales. But the thing that clicked the mode stuff together was he gave me this sheet with all these fingerings for one-octave modes. And I diligently practiced them for like ... two days or something maybe, before the lightbulb clicked. Because obviously, any one big pattern contains seven or eight little one-octave modes. Therefore, the one scale is all the scales. All the scales are the one scale. One mode to rule them all, one mode to ...
... I'll stop.
-
FWIW, the CAGED positions are combinations of 3 string and 4 string octave fingerings (or fractions of them).
-
I just viewed Jack Zucker's recent post of a old clip of him playing Donna Lee and replied with a question that is maybe better suited for this string.
I retired about 3 years ago and began learning jazz guitar. I still consider myself a beginner and to my ear I sound like a hack, although my teacher tells me I’m making good progress. My biggest challenge is weening my ear off a lifetime of rock n roll rhythm and timing, and toward being able to replicate something closer to jazz phrasing. For me that’s a more daunting task than learning theory. Seems to me that Donna Lee would be a great teaching tool for someone in my situation, assuming that I take it a modest tempo. What do you think? Does Donna Lee work as a teaching vehicle for a beginner or is it better suited for a more experienced player?
$8500 - 2010 Moffa Maestro Virtuoso Archtop Black...
Today, 03:35 AM in For Sale