Finally lessons that are about tunes! Great work keep it up! Perhaps link up your lick lessons with some of these tunes so we can see how you apply them to a tune! Just a thought!
Thanks for this! By the way in the "more rhythm" exercise, your timing is different from the notation in bar 8. I only know this because I've had it on repeat trying to play along! 🙂
Hey man, you have some really great videos for jazz bass. I play electric and upright for my high school jazz band, and these vids are helping out a lot, as I am primary a trombonist, and I'm fairly new to bass. Keep up the great work!
Great job and thanks for making this! I just started studying this song on standard guitar and this was a great explanation of how to walk through the progression. I really like how practical your descriptions are, it was all very clear and easy to follow. Ill be checking out some of your other videos!
Hello Jared, a wonderful, clear interpretation for teaching purposes of this bossa evergreen! Btw: I would like to know which bass model you usually play in the videos? Regards!
Good structured lesson, Jared... even without the blinks! 😀, one thing though: To me it seems this piece has only two "sections". The A-section is from bar 1 to 16, and B-section from bar 17 to 32... so two 16 bar sections (hence the double lines marked in the Real Book) instead of four 8 bar sections?!...
Where are the PDF's supposed to be? I'm not finding them either and I really appreciate what you're putting out here. I went to your GoFundMe page and it says you are not accepting contributions there any longer.
Thanks for the ideas. My wife's under the weather, otherwise I'd be pestering her to accompany me on piano. She's Brazilian and has Bossa running in her blood.
In my opinion, the best version of bass line among my searches for Black Orpheus in youtube.
Thanks, Allan
Thx for the video!
5:03 Exercie 1 : 2-Feel
6:18 Exercise 2 Rhythm
7:20 Exercice 3 : More rhythm!
Excellent as always Jared. Thank you for providing the Bass community with these videos.
Thanks! It means a lot! :)
I thought this was very useful. You are an excellent teacher. I'm a classical cellist looking to expand to other things. Thank you.
Finally lessons that are about tunes! Great work keep it up! Perhaps link up your lick lessons with some of these tunes so we can see how you apply them to a tune! Just a thought!
Another fine lesson. Concise and structured for easy application. Thanks
Thanks for this! By the way in the "more rhythm" exercise, your timing is different from the notation in bar 8. I only know this because I've had it on repeat trying to play along! 🙂
Thanks you for your video, you are a good teacher and this video was so useful for me
Thanks for another great video! The chord progression in the B section is the same as the A section in Autumn Leaves.
Thanks for the videos and sheet music.
No worries! :)
Hey man, you have some really great videos for jazz bass. I play electric and upright for my high school jazz band, and these vids are helping out a lot, as I am primary a trombonist, and I'm fairly new to bass. Keep up the great work!
Zeke Flint Thanks Zeke. I'm glad to hear you're enjoying the videos. Good luck with your playing. :)
Talking about being a bass player to the bone hah
Love the lessons! I use these lessons on my Bb tuba. It works~
Wow, this is really useful, thank you so much !
Great job and thanks for making this! I just started studying this song on standard guitar and this was a great explanation of how to walk through the progression. I really like how practical your descriptions are, it was all very clear and easy to follow. Ill be checking out some of your other videos!
I love this work. Thanks!
Thanks
Thanks. Nicely structured show. 😎
C'est beau ça...!!!
Thanks, it really helps
great job, explanation all is great thank you Jared
slowly explained thanks for the non english native
very useful, thanks!
Thanks for sharing man
Thanks!
Hello Jared, a wonderful, clear interpretation for teaching purposes of this bossa evergreen! Btw: I would like to know which bass model you usually play in the videos? Regards!
Thanks Jose, I play a Yamaha RBX375 5 string.
Good structured lesson, Jared... even without the blinks! 😀, one thing though: To me it seems this piece has only two "sections". The A-section is from bar 1 to 16, and B-section from bar 17 to 32... so two 16 bar sections (hence the double lines marked in the Real Book) instead of four 8 bar sections?!...
do you teach jazz guitar also?
Thank you !!!
About the chord progression in B part: is it Blue Bossa?
love your vids, man. gj
Good guess, but no. Thanks!
is it from "Ceora"? good vid but would have liked more explanation on how you approached "goosing" the two feel rhythm.
Fly me to the moon? haha
I don't see the PDF'S.
Where are the PDF's supposed to be? I'm not finding them either and I really appreciate what you're putting out here. I went to your GoFundMe page and it says you are not accepting contributions there any longer.
WHY DONT YOU BLINK?
Good question.
He is from Outtaspace..
Hahaha. Yeah, this is definitely something I'm trying to address at the moment! Being a zombie is not ideal! :P
Jared Plane I love your work but loosen up a lil brutha....blink.
William Robinson yep, I'm working on it! :)
WOW!
The song is called "Manha de Carnaval" carnival morning, but since it was used in the movie Black Orpheus any people call it that, but is incorrect.
I think the answer to your chord progression question is: Autumn Leaves.
Thanks for the ideas. My wife's under the weather, otherwise I'd be pestering her to accompany me on piano. She's Brazilian and has Bossa running in her blood.
This tune is not a Bossa, it's a ballad. Watch the movie.
Why the 5 string when you dont need it,I cant even follow ,👎 I'm out