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bixntram (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
Great video! I'm an intermediate trumpet player and am presently working on "Autumn Leaves," so thanks. But the flatted 13th sounded a bit jarring. I thought that was a 'no, no,' but maybe I just don't have the ears for it yet. It would certainly work as a passing tone, but standing alone? Hey, I'm still a beginner. This was very helpful.Have you made a vid on pentatonics? That would be very helpful! Thanks for your efforts.
BENTLEY1310 (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
cool can you have some other ones like has anybody seen my girl pleas i love that thanks
jimmymccombs (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
nice video man jimmy in kansas home of the blues.
loversheretic (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
yeeahhh GO ROOT POSITION CHORDS!
sacredgeometry (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
i have allways prefered to play this with a Bbmin instead of Bbmaj7 even with the seven it just sounds more melencholic to me
philfromtdb (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
can u post a video show how to do jazz runs?
jambae (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
cheers mate
MusicGuru12 (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
Yes, looking back I noticed for the first octave of D major I played a C natural rather than a C#. A D major scale is:D-E-F#-G-A-B-C#-D
MusicGuru12 (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
Dsus4 is neither Major nor minor as the 3rd note has been completley changed to the 4th of the scale; G.
Chiz87 (December 31, 1969 at 6:59 pm)
Actually it was the D major scale I meant, you played up 2 ocvtaves and they were different from each other.Are all those variations of a major chord? I thought they were just 'chords'? For example, a Dsus4 doesn't have an F# in it, so isn't it a different chord? |