Great stuff Andy. I just noticed in this video, you covered the very thing I asked you about a few weeks ago about the Ab7 variation at 14:05. Very cool to see it demonstrated. I finally understand it. It took me 3 years to find an answer. Really outstanding. Thanks. Well done.
Thanks Andy, I like the way that you play so relaxed with shell voicing. Just another reason for following your videos. The information comes over easier this way.
Thanks for the lesson. One question: Did you intend to play an Ebdim chord or an Edim? The diagram indicates tones E, Db and and G which are part of Edim.
@@jazzguitarwithandy I did my ear training as a teenager in the 70's watching TV with my guitar, the theme songs and the incidental music from the Rockford Files, Barnaby Jones, cartoons, etc... who knew I was learning jazz from the best musicians?
Excellent tutorial. Please, could you sing or invite a singer, at least for some parts of the songs, so we can learn how to play and sing at the same time?
Thanks. It is Edim as you say - just a typo. The chord diagram was correct, I'd just forgotten to put in the all the important flat symbol 😂. I've corrected it on the PDF on my website.
Don't forget to grab the PDFs from today from my website! Leave me any questions below and I'll get back to you - Andy
Good stuff Andy! You have helped me understand some progressions I have heard over the years. Thanks!
Glad to be of help 😎
Inversions are our friend. They make a composition interesting. Love your talent, knowledge, and presentations.
Thanks Steve. Inversions just bring thing to life!
Perfectly explained ! thank you
You're welcome!
Great stuff Andy. I just noticed in this video, you covered the very thing I asked you about a few weeks ago about the Ab7 variation at 14:05. Very cool to see it demonstrated. I finally understand it. It took me 3 years to find an answer. Really outstanding. Thanks. Well done.
Cheers Don - yes forgot it was in this video
great job explaining things
Thanks Karl.
Thanks Andy, I like the way that you play so relaxed with shell voicing. Just another reason for following your videos. The information comes over easier this way.
Thanks Stuart. Those shapes definitely take some getting used to, but they sound great to my ears.
Thank You! That is really helpful to me!
Glad to hear it :)
great great greate lesson !
Thanks! 😃
that is really nice theory laid out, thank you I learned couple new things
Glad to hear it!
Thanks man!
Thanks for tuning in Josh.
Great video loads of useful information here for me 🙂
Glad you found it useful Mark, thanks for the comment.
So good explained !!👏👏
Glad it was helpful!
Going to learn this one in the morning.....time for bed
Great lesson BTW
Cheers John.
This is so awesome. Great video!
Hey Eric, thanks for tuning in. Glad you like it. Lessons on soloing over this tune to come in the next couple vids.
@@jazzguitarwithandy I will tune in as soon as they are up!
Thanks for the lesson. One question: Did you intend to play an Ebdim chord or an Edim? The diagram indicates tones E, Db and and G which are part of Edim.
You're welcome. It's meant to be Edim, just a typo. I've corrected it on the downloadable chart.
Should it be Eb7 to Eo in your chart in the A?
Hi - yes, it's a typo. The chord shape is right, I just stupidly missed that I'd put Eb and not E. I've just corrected on the files.
On the chord chart I think you wrote Eb° instead of E°. Nice lesson though!
Thanks for pointing that out Claudio - indeed. I'll try and get that fixed.
While practicing Rhythm Changes, I just fell right into the Ballad of Jed Clampett.
Flintstones is the classic one to find!
@@jazzguitarwithandy I did my ear training as a teenager in the 70's watching TV with my guitar, the theme songs and the incidental music from the Rockford Files, Barnaby Jones, cartoons, etc... who knew I was learning jazz from the best musicians?
Excellent tutorial. Please, could you sing or invite a singer, at least for some parts of the songs, so we can learn how to play and sing at the same time?
In the A section. How is the second chord in bar 6 an EbDim? E-Db-G implys E Dim? (Seriously asking. Not trying to point out mistakes)
Thanks. It is Edim as you say - just a typo. The chord diagram was correct, I'd just forgotten to put in the all the important flat symbol 😂. I've corrected it on the PDF on my website.
So Ebo = Eo?
Yep - sorry that was an error in the shape on the screen. It's correct on the download.