@@mattkruft8512 thanks man. I really like your blues jazz phrasing, it's be great to see you do a video just going over some nice melodies or chord progressions
Thanks for reaching out! You are correct, the 7th degree triad (3 note voicing) is a Bdim chord - if you were to add the 7th on top and make it a four note voicing that becomes a Bmin7b5 or B half-diminished chord
Great playing and great explaining! The thing that bugs me is this "Nashville number system" fad that is going around now. Roman numerals have been used in music analysis since the 18th century and originated with the French composer Jean-Philippe Rameau. I like to give credit where credit is due and this "number system" is NOT from Nashville.
Very cool, I didn't know that - thanks for reaching out! I know I did a lot of score analysis in music school using those same Roman numerals, I don't think I heard the term "Nashville numbers" until later. I think us musicians are just lazy lol
Nashville numbers really only pertain the the writing of a Nashville Number Chart, the NNS doesn’t really work for jazz and the charts don’t have the same function. No one claimed that the use of numbers for intervals came from Nashville, Nashville Number Charts just work well for session players that work in Nashville or players in a country based band using that style of chart.
A you tuber not shouting at me at 300 words a minute! Bliss.
Sweet Norwegians(Fjords ), lovely tone
Lol high praise!
Absolutely Beautiful. Thanks for teaching me.
Thanks for watching!
Love this video! Reminds me of the chords in ‘I want a little sugar in my bowl’ performed by Nina Simone
Thanks for watching!
Love that Canadian guitar... great choice
Thing sounds killer and plays like butter! Thanks for watching
Great lesson 👏🎸
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for sharing! Greetings from Spain
Thanks for watching!
Was randomly recommended this channel. I'm not disappointed. Happy to be subscriber 39!
Thanks so much for watching and subscribing! More to come!
@@mattkruft8512 thanks man. I really like your blues jazz phrasing, it's be great to see you do a video just going over some nice melodies or chord progressions
@@skobywankenobi good suggestion - will put something in the works
Really helpful stuff, man. Thanks so much!
Glad you enjoyed! Making a point for more content in 2022, stay tuned
This is terrific. Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
Not sure why this was recommended to me, but it was cool, and I hope the algorythmn god is blessing you with a ton of views in the following days
Thanks so much for watching!
Great Stuff brother big cheers!!
We’re you at the Tuba skinny show on the 24th, At the Maison ?
th-cam.com/video/3Y4UDDjTS_g/w-d-xo.html
Awesome
Thanks for watching!
thanks!
Thanks for watching!
I'm very jealous of your knowledge and improv
More videos to come! Happy to share what I know
Nice, Matt! One thing to note (pun!) the 7th degree is Bdim vs Bm7-5?
Thanks for reaching out!
You are correct, the 7th degree triad (3 note voicing) is a Bdim chord - if you were to add the 7th on top and make it a four note voicing that becomes a Bmin7b5 or B half-diminished chord
Hey I would like some jazz guitar lesson
Hey Sean, thanks for reaching out! You can go to my website www.mattkruft.com/contact and reach me through the form. Hope to hear from you soon
@@mattkruft8512 done
Great playing and great explaining!
The thing that bugs me is this "Nashville number system" fad that is going around now. Roman numerals have been used in music analysis since the 18th century and originated with the French composer Jean-Philippe Rameau.
I like to give credit where credit is due and this "number system" is NOT from Nashville.
Very cool, I didn't know that - thanks for reaching out! I know I did a lot of score analysis in music school using those same Roman numerals, I don't think I heard the term "Nashville numbers" until later. I think us musicians are just lazy lol
Nashville numbers really only pertain the the writing of a Nashville Number Chart, the NNS doesn’t really work for jazz and the charts don’t have the same function. No one claimed that the use of numbers for intervals came from Nashville, Nashville Number Charts just work well for session players that work in Nashville or players in a country based band using that style of chart.
Is this standard tuning?
It is!
Math...😫
But fun!