I’m not good enough to really incorporate a lot of the ideas on this channel yet, but I like watching this stuff, cuz it’s like seeing what is down the road. So inspiring, so beautiful.
What happens if Adams stops making videos? Something happens to him? Would you stop learning? That’s such a shallow way of learning, who cares who is teaching us? We should be open to learning from anyone, you are the type of person to not learn from someone who has a skin color who is a bit darker no matter how talented they are. Stop crushing talent and be open to learning no matter what, or else you will be left with what you begin with.
@@botvinny608 No, YOU relax. These type of comments are the ones who get 10k likes while it doesn’t support the cause we are here for, enjoying to learn and be open minded.
Harmony’s such a cool thing, ain’t it? Don’t get me wrong, the melody of a song is important-but the harmony and the implications of subtle differences in the voicings for me are where the piano truly becomes that, “vehicle of expression,” that we’d want it to be.
Thanks so much for your videos! Your style of playing is so pleasing. Way too advanced for me at the moment, but who knows? Maybe I'll get somewhere approaching this someday.
👏👏👏👏👏This is really incredible, could someone translate it into Spanish for me...?? I'm understanding something but it would be nice if someone can help me, thank you
Do great jazz musicians keep an encyclopedia of these random chunks of musical goodness in their working memory to be able to recall them to the keys whenever the musical moment strikes? Each of these videos is GOLD, but I can’t remember all of these things while improvising 😢.
It helps to master one or two and overuse it in as many contexts (tunes) as you can imagine and in as many keys as you can imagine then when you are almost sick of it add more. By doing this over time they will be internalized into your improv vocabulary! Best of luck in your practice!
@@calebraysilcott9471ch a good comment lol it’s really about taking one sound or concept or skill and practicing the crap out of it until it’s ingrained in your muscle memory and your ear and i really love how caleb said it - *overuse* it. it’s not the only way to practice, but it’s one hella effective way! (and fun) you just fckin tastelessly put that shit everywhere so you get used to the physical feeling of using it and the experience of hearing it in all the situations you might want it (and all the situations you don’t), and then you gradually dial it back to a sound in your palette
I reccomend just overusing the technique as much as you can until it gets stale, then move to another and so on. You eventually achieve a balance of all the techniques you learn so you don’t get tired of any particular thing
Think kinetic memory, not short term memory. Your "fingers" (cerebellum) can remember a lot more a lot better than your short term memory. A good player shouldnt be conciously "thinking" too much when they perform.
Really appreciate you guys putting out shorts so i can retain some non braindead information from youtube shorts. Also not trying to pitch me some paid class or anything. Its really difficult to find just straight usefull information on music theory online these days and you guys are one of the few resources that is pretty much great in all ways. Keep it up please!
This guy is telling all the secrets that took me 10 years to teach myself from a radio boom box as a kid. I wish I grew up with a teacher. Many many hours teaching myself.
As a saxophone player, your short videos really help bridge the gap in understanding between what I am hearing and how you guys get those sonorities. Thanks a bunch!!
Just adding this because it's under used and very cool. Root, Dom 7, 9, 13. No 3, no 5, it's dominant, it has a 5th in it. It can be very ambiguous and used in different ways to transition very creatively. Its a composition Swiss Army knife.
What’s crazy is I use to randomly play those with no context as a kid!!! Now that I’ve grown and season a little bit it’s about placement for me!!! Know when to use those chords!!!
Yep :') That's one of the coolest things to do, rediscover things you used to do, sounds you used to enjoy creating, and learning more about different contexts to use them in, why you like them, what they really are, who else used them. It's such a full-circle feeling.
For those that like a systematic treatment of fancified dominant chords, look up the Upper Structure system. It characterizes 9 extensions/enhancements to the basic dom 7th chord. In that system, example #2 here becomes: C7, US #iv, root doubled.
I'm glad to come across an Open Studio short. I was digging into your content before YT introduced shorts and triggered the ADHD I've fought my whole life.
I think there are lots of videos on by Barry Harris himself on TH-cam covering this topic (6th diminished scale), he has recorded many masterclasses. And there are also many people that explains his method (with the info extracted from his own videos).
Sooooo this is a big ask... could we get some chord theory videos? Some good chord progressions, like you do, buy explaining why it works so well? Either way, thank you so much for all of this.
👏👏👏👏👏Realmente esto es increíble alguien podría traducirme al español.. ?? Estoy comprendiendo algo pero estaría bueno si alguien puede ayudarme gracias
So cool! Been learning piano for only 6 months now but apparently it's the instrument I was made for (I knew since I was 5, but got distracted with guitar and didn't start taking lessons until now, 33... 🥲) so this is super useful to level up. There are some bits here that I find totally doable and applicable to my playing after some practice, specially the first set and Barry Harris stuff. Thank you for this! I love it!
It took me over five minutes to decode the 7-3-7-3 part... In case anyone wonders: It always refers to the root of the base F. See you next year when I understood the rest...
I've been trying to write songs, but I'm stuck in a rut just using diatonic chords, even with extensions they sound predictable. Can anyone give me some tips of other chords I can try injecting in amongst the diatonic chords to change things up? Thanks in advance
That Barry Harris bit sounded more or less like the same progression and movement as in the music for the fairy fountain in the legend of Zelda: Ocarina of time! 😃
Why "clutch"? Is it an analogy with the clutch of a car, to connect and disconnect the engine with the wheels? Is it a chord that helps the connection and disconnection between 2 other chords?
a common way to open misty is with a Idim7 chord into the Imaj7 (in the key of Eb, it would simply be Ebdim7 into Ebmaj7). another example is Oscar Peterson's recording with Clark Terry, where he plays a D7#9/Eb into Ebmaj7.
Very nice but in the first example there's a lot of doubling of voices (3rds and 7ths). In previous OS videos on voicing I thought this was generally to be avoided. Adam, can you clarify?
Hey guys. I'm tryna learn sheet music, why is there a sharp symbol at the beginning of the staff right after the cleffs, even though there are no notes after it
the chord with the #11 is the fourth degree coming from the melodic minor , but if you add the flat 9 it change the rule , where is that coming from? thanks a lot man
I need to spend a month doing nothing but studying your videos
Great idea!!
A month playing just these changes in every key 🎹
Don't say it, do it.
Play them...
Yes, that’s implied when studying music
I've been an active amateur musician all my life. This is like calculus to me. I salute you
I never learned calculus but im learning NOWWWWWW
Just like me frfr😂but I understand the theory which is not that hard but what he’s actually playing and how he’s playing it is crazy
ok, ok...
@@NE.RORoRo ok, ok....
@@fortunesemwaga9852 I remember the first time l saw a Steely Dan guitar transcription. OMG 💀
I’m not good enough to really incorporate a lot of the ideas on this channel yet, but I like watching this stuff, cuz it’s like seeing what is down the road.
So inspiring, so beautiful.
Have you learned scales, triad chords, inversions, 7th chords, chord voicings??
If I could only learn from one person, it would be Adam.
What happens if Adams stops making videos? Something happens to him? Would you stop learning? That’s such a shallow way of learning, who cares who is teaching us? We should be open to learning from anyone, you are the type of person to not learn from someone who has a skin color who is a bit darker no matter how talented they are. Stop crushing talent and be open to learning no matter what, or else you will be left with what you begin with.
@@-petrichor-7263 relax bud....
@@botvinny608 No, YOU relax. These type of comments are the ones who get 10k likes while it doesn’t support the cause we are here for, enjoying to learn and be open minded.
@-petrichor-7263 ok lol. Pretty sure bro was just expressing his gratitude for the OPs lessons. But whatever you want to make it about is fine too.
@@botvinny608 Why you so chill?
Harmony’s such a cool thing, ain’t it? Don’t get me wrong, the melody of a song is important-but the harmony and the implications of subtle differences in the voicings for me are where the piano truly becomes that, “vehicle of expression,” that we’d want it to be.
ok, ok....
i love this comment
Melody and Harmony are almost the same thing, harmony is the result of melodic movement, or at least it should be in most contexts
@@musicfriendly12 melody is sorta harmony with rhythm, but often the underlying harmony is different from the melody's movement, no?
Incredible !!
I'll have to write these down.
Please do PDF files of those little snippets so this knowledge propagates easier !!
Co-signed!
Great idea! you can get a free PDF at this link -
learn.openstudiojazz.com/clutch-chords/
Thanks so much for your videos! Your style of playing is so pleasing. Way too advanced for me at the moment, but who knows? Maybe I'll get somewhere approaching this someday.
👏👏👏👏👏This is really incredible, could someone translate it into Spanish for me...?? I'm understanding something but it would be nice if someone can help me, thank you
It's so much easier seeing the keys and realizing the spacing between intervals of the 11 and flat 9. The keyboard litteraly is the road map to jazz
Do great jazz musicians keep an encyclopedia of these random chunks of musical goodness in their working memory to be able to recall them to the keys whenever the musical moment strikes? Each of these videos is GOLD, but I can’t remember all of these things while improvising 😢.
It helps to master one or two and overuse it in as many contexts (tunes) as you can imagine and in as many keys as you can imagine then when you are almost sick of it add more. By doing this over time they will be internalized into your improv vocabulary! Best of luck in your practice!
@@calebraysilcott9471ch a good comment lol
it’s really about taking one sound or concept or skill and practicing the crap out of it until it’s ingrained in your muscle memory and your ear
and i really love how caleb said it - *overuse* it. it’s not the only way to practice, but it’s one hella effective way! (and fun) you just fckin tastelessly put that shit everywhere so you get used to the physical feeling of using it and the experience of hearing it in all the situations you might want it (and all the situations you don’t), and then you gradually dial it back to a sound in your palette
I reccomend just overusing the technique as much as you can until it gets stale, then move to another and so on. You eventually achieve a balance of all the techniques you learn so you don’t get tired of any particular thing
Make a note in your phone and practice the shapes and theory. Simple
Think kinetic memory, not short term memory. Your "fingers" (cerebellum) can remember a lot more a lot better than your short term memory. A good player shouldnt be conciously "thinking" too much when they perform.
Really appreciate you guys putting out shorts so i can retain some non braindead information from youtube shorts. Also not trying to pitch me some paid class or anything. Its really difficult to find just straight usefull information on music theory online these days and you guys are one of the few resources that is pretty much great in all ways. Keep it up please!
This guy is telling all the secrets that took me 10 years to teach myself from a radio boom box as a kid. I wish I grew up with a teacher. Many many hours teaching myself.
How could u teach yourself with a radio boom box?
As a saxophone player, your short videos really help bridge the gap in understanding between what I am hearing and how you guys get those sonorities. Thanks a bunch!!
I never know a single thing of what this guy is talking about. It literally sounds like gibberish but I love it
That last progression is so beautiful
Second chord sounds Scriabinesque-beautiful!👌
True! Also the 5 chord Vince Guaraldi plays at the head of "Christmas Time Is Here."
Idk if he meant to play "I remember Stan" at the start but he did and it was beautiful
My fav piano channel by far, and I'm watching your videos from years ago. Thank you🎉
I tried this and enjoyed it. Thanks!
Just adding this because it's under used and very cool. Root, Dom 7, 9, 13. No 3, no 5, it's dominant, it has a 5th in it. It can be very ambiguous and used in different ways to transition very creatively. Its a composition Swiss Army knife.
Clutch indeed! Thanks
What’s crazy is I use to randomly play those with no context as a kid!!! Now that I’ve grown and season a little bit it’s about placement for me!!! Know when to use those chords!!!
Yep :')
That's one of the coolest things to do, rediscover things you used to do, sounds you used to enjoy creating, and learning more about different contexts to use them in, why you like them, what they really are, who else used them. It's such a full-circle feeling.
For those that like a systematic treatment of fancified dominant chords, look up the Upper Structure system. It characterizes 9 extensions/enhancements to the basic dom 7th chord. In that system, example #2 here becomes: C7, US #iv, root doubled.
omitting the 5 is so nice for intros in thst first one
Great information. Thank you very much.
I'm glad to come across an Open Studio short. I was digging into your content before YT introduced shorts and triggered the ADHD I've fought my whole life.
Awesome. Thanks!
Less is More! (First no 5th then no 3rd) Excellent vid! Thanks
comment for algorithm, these are the int/adv tips the world needs more of
Wow great sounds 🎹
In high school jazz band i played a tune called I Remember Stan (kenton) and the whole thing is built on rt7373. 👍
It was so good I swear I started hearing "I miss the rage"
So cool l can break down what the talented geniuses are playing in the next practice room😂
The b9 #11 chord is so great!
Thank you
A!! Very Nice and Calming Thank you!
This is such a great channel.
These shorts vids are gold nuggets, MosDef....
Great content. Should be part of a regular post and lesson. thanx.
Try the Holdsworth version of the maj7: 7 - 3 - 1 -5
So, for Fmaj7, it’s (bottom to top) E A F C
Outstanding!
That last chord is the first note in polka dots and moonbeams from "The Amazing Bud Powell v. 2"
Always makes me smile
always very good ideas. and I know, what I’m talking about. ❤ it’s like gold mine. chapeau! and thank you.
I wonder if you can do something with my favourite Stravinsky chord? A regular major chord - but adding also a minor third and a flat 7.
Awesome❤
Absolutely stunning!
You all are a gold mine
Do you guys explain in your videos what the Barry Harris “method” is ? I’d love to learn more
I think there are lots of videos on by Barry Harris himself on TH-cam covering this topic (6th diminished scale), he has recorded many masterclasses. And there are also many people that explains his method (with the info extracted from his own videos).
Sooooo this is a big ask... could we get some chord theory videos? Some good chord progressions, like you do, buy explaining why it works so well?
Either way, thank you so much for all of this.
i love this--where do i get this in slower motion?
Nice! Thanks
What makes those chords shine are the octaves. At least it's what I get from it. Thank you.
The third chord works amazing with Cadd4 and Abmaj13#5
Which one?
The second one reminded me of "Christmas Time Is Here" in some places.
Hi @OpenStudioJazz would there need to normally need to be a third in the root 2 5 7 chord?
Love it
Hey i really like your content! cheers!
The last one is part of the opening chords in Joe Hisaishi's One Summer's day for Sprited Away
That Barry Harris thing actually reminded me of Gershwin and Im not sure why. I think Rhapsody in Blue has a section that sounds like it maybe
👏👏👏👏👏Realmente esto es increíble alguien podría traducirme al español.. ?? Estoy comprendiendo algo pero estaría bueno si alguien puede ayudarme gracias
Wow…jam packed. Anyway we could get a glimpse into the harmonic theory of 1 and 2? Why’s it work so well..
So cool! Been learning piano for only 6 months now but apparently it's the instrument I was made for (I knew since I was 5, but got distracted with guitar and didn't start taking lessons until now, 33... 🥲) so this is super useful to level up. There are some bits here that I find totally doable and applicable to my playing after some practice, specially the first set and Barry Harris stuff. Thank you for this! I love it!
Very insightful😊
Yes
These chords without thirds sound great on guitar and are incredibly easy to implement in your playing ! Happy practicing everybody
Thank you!
Israel Houghton - every prayer.
Awesome
Brilliant loop! "Those are" at the end 👏👏👏👏👏👏
❤not many piano players here. (sorry for my English) thank you from Hamburg Germany
It took me over five minutes to decode the 7-3-7-3 part... In case anyone wonders: It always refers to the root of the base F. See you next year when I understood the rest...
Dm11 hits different
I've been trying to write songs, but I'm stuck in a rut just using diatonic chords, even with extensions they sound predictable. Can anyone give me some tips of other chords I can try injecting in amongst the diatonic chords to change things up? Thanks in advance
Open question; what is the definition of a clutch chord? :-)
Bro went fairy fountain
What is that chord from klKeith Jarrett's tokyo encore? You'll know the one.
I've taken two years of music theory and chord names still sound like gibberish to me.
That Barry Harris bit sounded more or less like the same progression and movement as in the music for the fairy fountain in the legend of Zelda: Ocarina of time! 😃
FIRST ONE SOUNDS LIKE SOMEONE IN LOVE
Why "clutch"? Is it an analogy with the clutch of a car, to connect and disconnect the engine with the wheels? Is it a chord that helps the connection and disconnection between 2 other chords?
The C7(add 13, #11, b9) sounds like the voicing for an opening of Misty, something with Ella on it, I swear.
a common way to open misty is with a Idim7 chord into the Imaj7 (in the key of Eb, it would simply be Ebdim7 into Ebmaj7). another example is Oscar Peterson's recording with Clark Terry, where he plays a D7#9/Eb into Ebmaj7.
Do you have to press the left pedal to play them?
The second one takes me straight to Vince Guaraldi.
🔥🔥
You are above my pay grade right now 😅
Does anyone remember a song called the guy that found the lost chord?
What was that chord or have we lost it again?
What's a clutch chord?
Does a 13..11..9.have to have a dominant seven in it?
Very nice but in the first example there's a lot of doubling of voices (3rds and 7ths). In previous OS videos on voicing I thought this was generally to be avoided. Adam, can you clarify?
I've not seen mention of others yet, but certainly 3rds have been in nearly all the voicing related stuff!
Hey guys. I'm tryna learn sheet music, why is there a sharp symbol at the beginning of the staff right after the cleffs, even though there are no notes after it
Indicates the default key
The chord played during the C7 Blabla is not #11 since a F note is played
Noice sounds
I feel like I'm watching Mr. Roger's Neighborhood, and I mean that in a very good way.
Would someone mind telling me the name if the classic song played in the beginning section?
Corcovado by Tom Jobim :)
Cool!!!
the chord with the #11 is the fourth degree coming from the melodic minor , but if you add the flat 9 it change the rule , where is that coming from? thanks a lot man
crazy
Where can i watch the rest of this?
👏🏻👏🏻
❤
I love chords sans 3