Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Hello and welcome back to Inside Piano Video Tutorials As usual on this video we are going to answer some of questions posted by you guys in our comments section. I’ve got requests for a video on how to improvise jazz piano. Fravier Sckeiser wants to know about piano broken chords. and Eliezer Perez wants to know about piano improvisation in minor chords. First of all is very important that we understand that improvisation is different in every music style rock, jazz, country, blues, they are all different languages they might have their similarities, but even within 1 style there are different improvisation dialects. On this video we are going to talk about how to improvise jazz piano using the bebop scale and the jazz melodic minor scale and we’ll also include how to use broken chords in jazz improvisation. Jazz improvisation is the big elephant and it would obviously take way more than one video to go deep in the subject. but let’s take the most common chord progression in jazz which is the II-V-I and use it to illustrate the concept. Let’s take it from the F Major key. The II-V-I on the F major scale consists of a IIm7 chord In this case Gm7 followed by dominant C7 and resolving to the IMaj7 in this case FMaj7 To improvise fluently we need to simplify, we need to find commonalities and take advantage of them. The first thing we’ll notice when playing the scales of this chord progression is that the scales of these chords share the same notes. The G minor dorian scale Share the same notes of the C7 Mixolydian scale Which shares the same notes of the F Major scale Because all these scales share the same notes at their fundamental level they are interchangeable with each other. But here is the problem I found on a lot of piano video tutorials on youtube attempting to answer this question. And the problem is that they use the mixolydian scale as the basis of jazz improvisation. And they mumble their way up and down this scale. But somehow this scale doesn’t sound right it just doesn’t sound very jazzy There is an innate Flaw to this scale The flaw of this scale is that this scale is rhythmically uneven because the notes of the chords do not fall on the down beat and that’s why it doesn’t sound right. Let me show you 1, 2, 3, 4 The downbeat notes are the notes of D minor And that’s why if you improvise jazz using this scale you just keep loosing your footing Specially when trying to play 16th notes it becomes a nightmare. This is where the bebop scale comes into play, the bebop scale was design to solved this inconsistency by adding an extra half step passing tone On the bebop scale the passing tone is B and the notes of the chord fall on the downbeat. 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4, 1 This is why this scale works so well Now we have a rhythmically correct basic scale that we can use all over the chord progression ascending and descending and we can play those 16th notes beautifully Our fingers just fall into place by themselves. And then there is the minor scale. Unless you happen to be playing on the dorian mode this scale will not be very helpful because it also has rhythmic incosistencies Same problem That is why the Jazz dialect uses the melodic minor scale instead to bring more color to the progression The melodic minor scale has both the major 7 and the minor 7 and this is what brings about that jazzy flavor. But there is a difference with the classical music melodic minor scale and that is that the Jazz melodic minor scale also uses the major 3rd note in this case B when descending Again, the Jazz melodic minor scale and since these scales are interchangeable we can play the bebop scale over the C7 Or over Gm7 Or we can play the melodic minor scale over Gm7 or over C7 Or we can use both scales on both chords Let’s play the melodic minor scale ascending and the Bebop scale descending On the minor chord and on the dominant chord So that’s that We went from playing this To this But now we need to leave the monotony of playing only scales so let’s use now broken chords to add to our piano improvisation Broken chords are basically the notes of the chords arpeggiated. But what chords should we use? Well, all the chords from the scale of chords We need to know our scale of chords. We are on F Major So what is the Major scale of chords? IMaj7 - IIm7 - IIIm7 - IVMaj7 - V7 - VIm7 - VIIm7(b5) And this is another commonality because the 3 chords the IIm7 - V7 - IMaj7 all share the same scale of chords. so we can play them from F and it would be... from Gm they would be... and for C7... Let me show you an example on how to use these broken chords on the piano to create different motifs Let’s start with the C7 broken chord Dm Dm7 Em7(b5) FMaj7 Gm7 Am7 and BbMaj7 we can continue forever or play our scales and use them to go down So what happened here? at the end of this last sentence I used extra half steps on each of the scales the bebop and the minor scale which is another concept we haven’t covered yet The half step rules of the scales The Bebop language is all about half steps there are half step rules for all the scales which allow us even more rhythmic variety and freedom For example the Bebop C7 dominant scale already has the B half step passing tone. But we can also use Db and Eb as half step passing tones We just have to be careful not to loose our footing. Let me show you what I mean by that If we start from C Everything is fine and dandy But look what happens when we play it from D You see? We loose our footing immediately As a rule if we start from D we should not play the B half step also when playing from D we can use the Db half step passing tone Also when playing from E we can play the B half step Or we can play the Eb half step passing tone as well as all the others. But let’s say for the sake or argument that we start from D and use the B passing tone anyway and loose our footing This happens because the notes of the chord are flipped to the weak part of the beat 1, 2, 3, 4 1, 2… But even so we can get our footing back in the octave below. and of course the minor scale has its own set of half step rules And since the scales are interchangeable, We can use both scales with their half steps on either chord Let’s play it on C7 Thank you for watching, if you like the video give us a thumbs up please subscribe, leave as a comment. and I’ll see you on the next video
B1 US scale minor bebop jazz chord melodic How to improvise Jazz Piano. Part 1. The Bebop Scale. 141 14 bb52005 posted on 2017/05/01 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary