You're welcome, David! It's certainly an important piece of jazz history, and I think the 12-bar blues can serve as an incredible canvas to work on all different eras of jazz, and many different styles of improvisation.
@@tomgiles1484 Blues is one ingredient. European classical music, French cabare-variete music, gypsy music, and German marches were other ingredients in early jazz.
This is it!! Wow! As soon as the video started I was like, that’s what I was looking for. I’ve been trying to frame my view to go from “I always wanted to learn how to…” to “how do I play…”. This helps to shift towards action and leads with curiosity rather just staying in fantasy of “I’ve always wanted to”. Thanks for this, Noah!
Glad you're enjoying them! Totally, that's the goal :) want to provide the quickest and most efficient way to implement new material into your playing.
Thank you for the tons of great info here, I love blues piano and am learning. You just gave me hours more of joyful practice ahead. Also it’s just entertaining to watch you play these so well. Thanks again!
Those are excellent riffs I eared out years ago, and they are very useful, and Noel does a GREAT job explaining how to play them. He should then add the left hand voicing comp, and tying the licks together in longer phrases. Then, show variations in context, and how to take the same idea, playing “geometrically”, to extend the harmonic ‘alphabet’ into altered scale/chord phrases, such as the flat & sharp 9, etc.
Noah, you help my songwriting and playing so much. I feel like i just had one of those galaxy brain moments when you said to keep the pinky where it’s at for messing around with blues riffs 🤯
Noah my name is Grant and I’ve come across your lessons and definitely will be tuning into them as often as possible…would there be a way you could demonstrate some Slow Blues Rhythms with Just a left hand chord with right hand improvising with licks and runs…haven’t seen any other teacher yet that has demonstrated this type of playing….Please respond to this when you get a chance…Thanks so much and look forward to seeing your lessons in this regard..❤🎹
Thank you very much for your explanations! If I might add something to the technique you're using in this video: one could also add the b note to the f minor pentatonic scale, making it an f minor blues scale. It adds a bit more blues/jazz feeling to the improvisation.
Cool lickes! And thank you for such a detailed explanation! I'm curious to know - how you find which note sequences (right-hand) sound "bluesy" and which not? Can you share any rules or patterns or any reference to read about?
Hey, it would be nice if you did courses exclusively on licks (just showing them with a pdf attached), like weissguitar has done with "51 galactic jazz licks" but for piano ! :)
I did enjoy it and practising them.thanx sadly I am only able to practice in short 20min periods so slowly absorb stuff.If I practice for longer I lose the feel of new stuff.Silly me.thanx again
Thanks for this video....Is it relevant to try to work these licks in all keys...or it is applicable for F only? I mean can an excellent pianist as you are play these in all keys?
Thanks Noah for the great tutorial, my 61 years old wrist is struggling with the trills (improving slowly) must confess I sometimes cheat by using thumb and third finger...
@@NoahKellman thanks Noah. Hey I ended up transcribing the introduction to the video as a challenge. Not sure why I did that, but glad I did as it got me t internalize the principle and to discover interesting voicings particularly the sense of movement from F#11 to F#5b9 Thanks again.🙏
@@NoahKellman yeah, grouping it into bars was a little tricky because of the rubato + my limited blues structure knowledge, but it helps checking myself when practicing in other keys
Great stuff , but please, please, turn off that 'background' music during your talking. It is distracting, annoying, interferes with the listening, and is irrelevant to your otherwise great tutorials. So please, again. Turn off that background stuff. It's unnecessary.
It's amazing to play that well when the piano is behind your back!
Good one! Not all jokes last for 8 minutes and 35 seconds 😊
lol
I feel that knowing the blues is a huge step toward learning jazz. Awesome, thanks Noah!
You're welcome, David! It's certainly an important piece of jazz history, and I think the 12-bar blues can serve as an incredible canvas to work on all different eras of jazz, and many different styles of improvisation.
Jazz comes from the blues, and the two are inseparable.
@@tomgiles1484 Blues is one ingredient. European classical music, French cabare-variete music, gypsy music, and German marches were other ingredients in early jazz.
Thats why We need more blues lessons .🎉🎉🎉
Finally, someone shows the proper fingering as well! Thanks a bunch!
Noah Yes, Yes I fell all of that BLUES AND JAZZ; IT REALLY PICKED ME UP.
This is it!! Wow! As soon as the video started I was like, that’s what I was looking for. I’ve been trying to frame my view to go from “I always wanted to learn how to…” to “how do I play…”. This helps to shift towards action and leads with curiosity rather just staying in fantasy of “I’ve always wanted to”.
Thanks for this, Noah!
That's a great mentality shift! Love it. So glad you found the video helpful!
@@NoahKellman thanks, bud!!
This is what TH-cam needed, I swear ❤️❤️
These are straight piano cheat codes! So great! Thanks, Noah!
Glad you're enjoying them! Totally, that's the goal :) want to provide the quickest and most efficient way to implement new material into your playing.
I loved this lesson. The licks are simple enough to add into my playing straight away. And they sound way hip.. awesome stuff. Thanks for the content.
Thank you for the tons of great info here, I love blues piano and am learning. You just gave me hours more of joyful practice ahead. Also it’s just entertaining to watch you play these so well. Thanks again!
More blues on this Channel. Some nasty 12 bar blues and slow blues. Blues is everything .🎉🎉🎉
Everytime I got exhausted from modern music, blues is my medicine
You are really talking now those Licks are saying a lot great job!!!!!
I've needed these fingerings for so long, thank you so much! I would never be opposed to a second video btw 😊
Thanks, Jason. Will definitely keep that in mind :) thanks for the comment!
NOW YOY ARE TALKING !!!!!!!!!!
Excellent lesson! Thank you!
Thank you!
Dude... Thia channel is amazing...thank you... Ive learned a lot in a few days
Hey, you're welcome! Glad you found it and thanks for the comment.
Thanks bro! God bless You
You're welcome, Sergio!
Bro you are a good teacher
Man thank you
Those are excellent riffs I eared out years ago, and they are very useful, and Noel does a GREAT job explaining how to play them. He should then add the left hand voicing comp, and tying the licks together in longer phrases. Then, show variations in context, and how to take the same idea, playing “geometrically”, to extend the harmonic ‘alphabet’ into altered scale/chord phrases, such as the flat & sharp 9, etc.
Love the way you play. Thank you
Awesome Noah’
Just purchased your Bundle from your web site’
LOVE the way you play and teach, absolutely AWESOME’
Noah, you help my songwriting and playing so much. I feel like i just had one of those galaxy brain moments when you said to keep the pinky where it’s at for messing around with blues riffs 🤯
Hey Chelsea, so glad to hear that! Thanks for commenting and supporting and keep up the good work!
Thanks Noah for explaining everything in such a straightforward way, easy to understand even by foreigners! 👍
Thanks Noah
Love these licks. I've been practicing No.4.
This is Gold
Lovely!! F, my favorite blues key!!
Excellent à real pleasure thanks you 🥇
Noah my name is Grant and I’ve come across your lessons and definitely will be tuning into them as often as possible…would there be a way you could demonstrate some Slow Blues Rhythms with Just a left hand chord with right hand improvising with licks and runs…haven’t seen any other teacher yet that has demonstrated this type of playing….Please respond to this when you get a chance…Thanks so much and look forward to seeing your lessons in this regard..❤🎹
Excellent!
Very helpful way of demonstrating fingering. I came here because my improvisations in major didn't sound so jazzy at all :)
Thank you 😁👍
Great tutorial
Congratulations Master Kellman, your method is very nice
Excelente hermano. Que Dios te bendiga
Muchas gracias!
Nice stuff! I would love to see you breaking down the piano solo by Ming Freeman on the Dance With a Stranger song.
Great lesson, clearly explained and straight to the point…..thanks
Just found your channel - will take a look, but looks fantastic so far.
fantastic. thank you!
J’adore merci please how to train working Noah these licks ? Slowly with the metronome first and increasing speed yes ?
You got some crazy skills. Enjoyed the tutorial.
Thank you! Cheers!
Great!!!! Thanks!!
can you demonstrate this in the context of playing the 12 bar blues
Good thought! Will keep this in mind for future vids. Thanks for the comment!
And that gospel turnaround thing there in the intro... Would like to look into that one 😎
Thank you very much for your explanations!
If I might add something to the technique you're using in this video: one could also add the b note to the f minor pentatonic scale, making it an f minor blues scale. It adds a bit more blues/jazz feeling to the improvisation.
SWEET!! Do you have that in a Midi File Sir?
Woahh thank you for these!
You're welcome, Adrian!
Talk, Talk Great Blues TALKING!!!
which piano you use from the library of nord ? sounds great!
I could watch you play all day 🙀☕
Thank you, Manuel! 🙏🙏
@@NoahKellman Too be honest I never liked Jazz but you helped me open my mind to it. Thanks 😊
wonderful~~!! I'm really moving. would you mind if i ask how to shoot the picture like you?(piano, score) can i learn on line?
Cool lickes! And thank you for such a detailed explanation! I'm curious to know - how you find which note sequences (right-hand) sound "bluesy" and which not? Can you share any rules or patterns or any reference to read about?
all in the ear! I would look up bebop and pentatonic scales
Thanks u share
Great video again😎
Thanks, Theo!
Very nice thanks a lot!
You're welcome, Hermeto! Thanks for your comment
Hey, it would be nice if you did courses exclusively on licks (just showing them with a pdf attached), like weissguitar has done with "51 galactic jazz licks" but for piano ! :)
I did enjoy it and practising them.thanx sadly I am only able to practice in short 20min periods so slowly absorb stuff.If I practice for longer I lose the feel of new stuff.Silly me.thanx again
Excelente
Are you playing the f minor blues scale?
Yeah
Awesome
Thanks Kevin!
Thanks for this video....Is it relevant to try to work these licks in all keys...or it is applicable for F only? I mean can an excellent pianist as you are play these in all keys?
really really good channel!
Thanks, much appreciated!
Thanks Noah for the great tutorial, my 61 years old wrist is struggling with the trills (improving slowly) must confess I sometimes cheat by using thumb and third finger...
Hey Alon, nothing wrong with that. We all have to use the fingerings that work best for us!
@@NoahKellman thanks Noah. Hey I ended up transcribing the introduction to the video as a challenge. Not sure why I did that, but glad I did as it got me t internalize the principle and to discover interesting voicings particularly the sense of movement from F#11 to F#5b9
Thanks again.🙏
@@alonshimonshaikaspi5956 That's awesome, Alon! Great job. Yeah, at the very least I would imagine it provided some good context.
@@NoahKellman yeah, grouping it into bars was a little tricky because of the rubato + my limited blues structure knowledge, but it helps checking myself when practicing in other keys
Formidable
Thanks, Maxime! Had you heard any of these before?
@@NoahKellman not at all, it’s new sounds! Thanks for your job, you are very talented !
@@MrBreizhBlood You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed them and let me know if you try them out.
damnnn,, you are really good :)
Very nice. Can you go over the chords and how to use them throughout?
Hey JT, will keep that in mind for a future video!
Are you playing through a nord? Or what model piano are you using?
I think It's a Nord stage keyboard too. (Image answering for a year old comment.
Lick #1 is straight out of Bobby Timmons’ solo on Moanin’.
Cool I haven't heard that in years! Gotta listen to it again. Pretty sure I've hard Oscar do similar licks too.
Now take on this
You going to try these out?
Yessir !
@@bryangarcia327 Awesome, let me know how it goes!
I need to know what you did @0:13 seconds ❓❓❓❓‼️❓
Fantastic 🔥🔥👍👍 I wanna also know 0:33 run and arpeggio lick,,
Actually simpler than it sounds! It’s basically a G Maj arpeggio over F7(#11)
Like Noah said G major over F7. Take this sound further with different upper structure triads.
@@NoahKellman Oh Thanks, Some Jazztic Sound is from F7(#11)! Thank you very much!
@@UkuleleAversion Oh! I got it the sound of Upper structure triads! your comments helped me a lot. Thank you!
@@ansikvv Glad it makes more sense now!
Keren nh bro
🙏🏽🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Glad you enjoyed it!
Noah, why don't offering the sheets for the riffs for a little $?
Hey Dan, definitely something I'll think about in the future :) just haven't had a chance to put it all together yet!
Why are they all in F minor?
Blues songs is identical with playing in F. In rare case, it is played in C.
Damn your left hand must be big as Texas.
🎹👀⚙😎✔
Thanks, Marek!
If you just had the transcription up this would be a 2 min. video
I don't read Transkription and prefer it this way so I'm thanksfull🎉❤
Great stuff , but please, please, turn off that 'background' music during your talking. It is distracting, annoying, interferes with the listening, and is irrelevant to your otherwise great tutorials. So please, again. Turn off that background stuff. It's unnecessary.
THANK YOU!!!!