Thank you very much for posting this lesson. In your video you say that there'll be a PDF of both the head and the scales for the song. You mention that the PDF will have all the positions of the scale all the way up the neck. I bought the PDF from your website but it only seems to have the head (in two positions) and no scales. The PDF that I downloaded is 4 pages. Am I missing something or is the PDF missing something? Hoping you can help.
@@Guitarreference I could never remember the bridge. I'd learn it, then a month later it was gone. Now I understand it's just BMa, BbMi, Abmi, F#MA - classic IV iii ii I in F# - and the riff is 3 5 3 R. Anyone else trying to learn this I suggest you practice the 3 5 3 and R over those chords - of course take into account ma or mi 3. Then learn the walk u to each new chord.
Hey, Loving the lesson and getting it under my fingers... Awesome job. Just wondering about what appears to be your Daughter on the Fender poster behind you! She actually looks so much like a you, only she's a girl, with long hair, is in a bikini and holding a Fender, not a Gibson. Other than that you two are very much alike!!! LOL!
Eb minor is E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C♭, and D Because you already have a Bb in there, you have a Cb not a B even though they are enharmonic (the same note) So if I asked you to "play the C chord in Eb minor" you will play CbMaj7 to avoid confusion between Bb-7
Thank You for your help and patience. Always wanted to learn this.
Neat clear and superb tutorial one of the iconic jazz songs. Easy to follow and learn. Thank you again
Thank you Andy!
I really appreciate this! You’re a great teacher. Thanks and hope all is well
Awesome lesson and beautifuly demonstrated! THANK YOU!
Thank you Camerarderie!
Thank u! Well taught!
Thank you Adriano!
Thank well taught
Thank you!
Thank you very much for posting this lesson. In your video you say that there'll be a PDF of both the head and the scales for the song. You mention that the PDF will have all the positions of the scale all the way up the neck. I bought the PDF from your website but it only seems to have the head (in two positions) and no scales. The PDF that I downloaded is 4 pages. Am I missing something or is the PDF missing something? Hoping you can help.
Just sent also sent you a couple of other things as well. Thanks for your support Tom!
@@Guitarreference OK, thanks for sending the correct PDF and the other things too. I appreciate you responding quickly.
Thanks a lot! Always wanted to learn this
Thank you.
Great lesson! Simply formatted and down-to-earth. I think I can play this thang now! BTW that's a very neat jazz guitar..what model is it?
Thank you Chance! ES-175 bought it new in 2000, man does time go fast!
@@Guitarreference Wow I need a jazz box..my pop/rock guitar with light gauge strings makes the jazz chords sharp//will do research..thx
TY sir 🙏🏼 your presentation style is gold
Thank you!
Thanks for that. I can see what the bridge is doing for the first time.
Thank you Rick!
@@Guitarreference I could never remember the bridge. I'd learn it, then a month later it was gone. Now I understand it's just BMa, BbMi, Abmi, F#MA - classic IV iii ii I in F# - and the riff is 3 5 3 R. Anyone else trying to learn this I suggest you practice the 3 5 3 and R over those chords - of course take into account ma or mi 3. Then learn the walk u to each new chord.
Thank you
Hey, Loving the lesson and getting it under my fingers... Awesome job. Just wondering about what appears to be your Daughter on the Fender poster behind you! She actually looks so much like a you, only she's a girl, with long hair, is in a bikini and holding a Fender, not a Gibson. Other than that you two are very much alike!!! LOL!
Funny!! I actually have a daughter that plays guitar and looks a little like the Fender girl!
Nice video. No bs
Thanks John!
Can anyone explain to me why all these lessons note the chord as Cbmaj7 instead of Bmaj7 ?? Whats the catch
Eb minor is E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C♭, and D
Because you already have a Bb in there, you have a Cb not a B even though they are enharmonic (the same note)
So if I asked you to "play the C chord in Eb minor" you will play CbMaj7 to avoid confusion between Bb-7
Thank's you very much. Hi to France.
your too fast