Glad to see this blues course expanding in every direction, I find your approach very useful also for songwriters like me that are learning piano to improve songwriting and composition. Thanks from Italy
thanks for your great tutorials Tony! perfect closing time calm down stuff here. some single malt, checking your video and get straight to the backing track.
It feels like a minor blues where the IV chord is replaced with the bVI chord like in the Pink Panther. But I can't explain the Dm11 except that it functions as a V chord.
Hey, I was messing around with this tune and for the D min part, I stumbled across the C Harmonic Minor scale (2nd mode thereof, whatever). It shares a lot of notes with the other two modes, just about splitting the difference. On the one hand, A-flat replaces the fifth of the chord (making it D dim 7), but on the other hand, A-flat is a strong blues note, and that weird E-flat shows up too. So I'm a little ambivalent, but I think it's ok for solos, but "out of bounds" for accompaniment. D Dorian leaves me feeling cold, too, something about it not flowing well to and from the other modes.
Yes it should be a C flat. It sometimes depending on the signature. In classical Theory, d flat to B is considered an augmented 6th that tends to resolve to the 5 chord.
@@TonyWinston Also makes it tricky to figure out how to vary the left hand, especially if there might be other players eventually. A few different possible scales that have D G C in common but otherwise hate each other! X-D Probably going to go to bed and look at it again tomorrow.
Great tutorial on one of my favourite pieces. Thanks for sharing.
Bravissimo😊very useful …thank you maestro
Glad you liked it!
Большое спасибо, so far you are the best on TH-cam .
Great video and advice, thanks for sharing your knowledge and analysis
Glad to see this blues course expanding in every direction, I find your approach very useful also for songwriters like me that are learning piano to improve songwriting and composition. Thanks from Italy
Great tutorial! I have never learned new jazz tune that fast, thank you.
I am so glad to see this great video
thanks for your great tutorials Tony! perfect closing time calm down stuff here. some single malt, checking your video and get straight to the backing track.
Sounds good. I like your channel too. tetris , harry potter
@@TonyWinston thanks for checking 🤩
Excellent work Tony, i find myself analyzing your videos more and more...i've got my work cut out for me :-) Thanks!
Thanks a lot. Very good as always.
It feels like a minor blues where the IV chord is replaced with the bVI chord like in the Pink Panther. But I can't explain the Dm11 except that it functions as a V chord.
had to come after listening to Chad LB with Randy Brecker @ Emmet Cohen then Wynton then Freddy... little tough acts to follow...
Hello Tony, uow, so many thanks you did the video ! Great, the idea of F dorian at the end, that's the type of colour to make a difference !
Glad you saw it! I've got some more video on it - coming soon...
Hey, I was messing around with this tune and for the D min part, I stumbled across the C Harmonic Minor scale (2nd mode thereof, whatever). It shares a lot of notes with the other two modes, just about splitting the difference.
On the one hand, A-flat replaces the fifth of the chord (making it D dim 7), but on the other hand, A-flat is a strong blues note, and that weird E-flat shows up too.
So I'm a little ambivalent, but I think it's ok for solos, but "out of bounds" for accompaniment. D Dorian leaves me feeling cold, too, something about it not flowing well to and from the other modes.
I feel like the B natural in the bass in the D flat 7 section should be rewritten as a C flat. Why isn't it written like that in the first place?
Yes it should be a C flat. It sometimes depending on the signature. In classical Theory, d flat to B is considered an augmented 6th that tends to resolve to the 5 chord.
Thank you, great video !
Flibberty-jibbits.
Doesn't the blues form (or feel) come from the fact that Fm is similar to Abm, so the change to Db feels like a I to IV change?
Did you mean Abm. Ab(Major) is relative major to Fm so you could look at Fm as a I chord and Db as the IV chord.
I still can't figure out the D minor part with the E flat hanging around! :-o
Kick that e flat out!
@@TonyWinston Also makes it tricky to figure out how to vary the left hand, especially if there might be other players eventually. A few different possible scales that have D G C in common but otherwise hate each other! X-D
Probably going to go to bed and look at it again tomorrow.
It's a very nice video (suit to my level) that worth much more views.
Great stuff.
Drug videos. Can't stop watching them and not taking them to the practice at all
Guillermo Cabrera Haha, I know the feeling
Keep it, and one day get to it .