To get your free beginner PDF www.newonlinesaxacademy.com/blog/141-how-to-play-greensleeves ⭐ 🎷⭐ Get All PDFs and backing tracks and access to all lessons exclusive on the courses page by becoming a premium member here: www.newonlinesaxacademy.com/memberships ☕ If you enjoyed this lesson you can buy me a coffee here ko-fi.com/paulrileysax
Cool cool 😎 I only played it one way; I'll give it a new look. 🤓 But only recently - a few years ago - noticed the half tones. Older tunes will specifically use 12 half tones and the 13th repeats 🤔 instead of the classic octave. Understanding this allows me to play songs differently and precisely with the least amount of notes. Cheers 🎉
Lovely interpretation! Takes me back to my Early Music days. One explanation for the lyric is that prostitutes in the Elizabethan era had green stains on their clothing from all that frollocking in the grass! Look it up if you don't believe me 😀
To get your free beginner PDF www.newonlinesaxacademy.com/blog/141-how-to-play-greensleeves
⭐ 🎷⭐ Get All PDFs and backing tracks and access to all lessons exclusive on the courses page by becoming a premium member here: www.newonlinesaxacademy.com/memberships
☕ If you enjoyed this lesson you can buy me a coffee here ko-fi.com/paulrileysax
Cool cool 😎
I only played it one way; I'll give it a new look. 🤓
But only recently - a few years ago - noticed the half tones.
Older tunes will specifically use 12 half tones and the 13th repeats 🤔 instead of the classic octave.
Understanding this allows me to play songs differently and precisely with the least amount of notes.
Cheers 🎉
Love the improvisation on this one Paul.
Thanks!
Gracias!!!
De nada!
Very nice ❤
Thanks!
Lovely interpretation! Takes me back to my Early Music days.
One explanation for the lyric is that prostitutes in the Elizabethan era had green stains on their clothing from all that frollocking in the grass! Look it up if you don't believe me 😀
Interesting!
❤
🙏
❤❤❤
🙏