Hi guys, I'm a beginner at gypsy jazz. and at guitar too. I don't even know what scale is.
I purchased rosenberg academy's lesson but it was too hard to learn to me and its quality was too bad.
Now I'm watching lessons of 'gypsy jazz school' but it's quite uncomfortable to understand because the teacher's pronunciation is little bad. I'm not good enough at English to understand that kind of pronunciation. I think he is from Iran or something.
Do you guys know which lesson is the best for total beginner?
If you do, please let me know !
Thank you
Comments
As to the Rosenberg's quality being "bad," I'd have to respectfully disagree. Again, of course, everyone's different, but I think the quality coming out of RA is excellent, and that would include the forum on Christiaan's site, and the written materials (transcriptions, etc.) he provides, if needed. The Gypsy Jazz School run by Yaakov Hoter (I believe he's Israeli, not Iranian) is also highly recommended by a number of people, though I can understand why the language thing might pose a problem.
As I understand it, if the RA is based on a kind of membership fee (with new material coming out consistently), Yaakov's structure is on a per-lesson basis. Both have helped a ton of people, and maybe once you get your feet just a bit wet with some of the resources from Stuart's thread, you might find these schools (or Denis Chang's DC Music School - another outstanding resource, excellent quality) might help you. Denis's site actually has quite a few beginner resources, including some free play-alongs - useful for when you've got some tunes under your fingers, and it is a service to our community he provided them. Also check out Gonzala Bergara's play-alongs on youtube, another resource generously provided.
Good luck!
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
Instead of online lessons, have you considered some books? I think Michael's "Gypsy Picking" and "Gypsy Rhythm" might be a good introduction since they will teach you the foundational skills required to play gypsy jazz.
Just wasn't sure if the language issue would be prohibitive or not. Very likely not, on thinking about it, particularly Michael's Gypsy Rhythm book (yes, I'll preach, start with rhythm work and stay there until you've got its essence), a true bible of rhythm chords, progressions, techniques, substitutions, virtually everything. (Michael's rhythm book is literally bedside, as I write this...a resource one returns to, over and over).
Hanear's right, I'd say...check these out.
pas encore, j'erre toujours.
the cool thing about GJ is that it can actually be as easy as you want it to be... if you find a good teacher, even if he/she doesn't play gypsy jazz, he/she can probably simplify certain melodies like lady be good or all of me, that even a beginner can play within months... and he/she can help you approximate the rhythm guitar stuff too...
i think it's more important to have fun right now and to see what 's right for you before getting to serious with the various instructional stuff out there (including my own 8) 8) 8) ) .. i do have free playalongs that are very slow on my site, and you can therefore practicing with those eventually
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
the cool thing about GJ is that it can actually be as easy as you want it to be... if you find a good teacher, even if he/she doesn't play gypsy jazz, he/she can probably simplify certain melodies like lady be good or all of me, that even a beginner can play within months... and he/she can help you approximate the rhythm guitar stuff too...
i think it's more important to have fun right now and to see what 's right for you before getting to serious with the various instructional stuff out there (including my own 8) 8) 8) ) .. i do have free playalongs that are very slow on my site, and you can therefore practicing with those eventually
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
- go to the "gypsy jazz real book" (located in the forum) and download all the PDFs. All the charts have diagrams for every chord. A good way to learn all the standard gypsy jazz voicings in the context of standard gypsy jazz tunes.
- download all the exercises from the technique course and spend a half hour on them daily, with a metronome of course
This might seem like an odd suggestion but I really do think this is a very good starting place:
http://www.amazon.com/Bluegrass-Rhythm- ... B00006FDQW
1. You'll learn some nice sounding open chords
2. You'll learn easy but excellent sounding chord progressions
3. You'll learn keeping time and keeping form
4. Bluegrass rhythm requires very precise picking which will benefit you in gypsy jazz
5. The instruction on the DVD is excellent and playing the material on the DVD will make you
sound good and is a ton of fun to play
Oh for sure, I didn't say that complete beginners to guitar shouldn't start with GJ, especially if that is their passion, I 'm just saying there's no method book out there that teaches guitar from the beginning using GJ as the reference style... No matter what, the student will need to get used to the instrument , it probably takes 6 months to a year for anyone who practices somewhat regularly to get a general feel of the instrument; which is why I recommend getting a decent teacher who doesn't necessarily specialize in GJ but who can, at least, be competent enough to simplify certain songs (lots of songs really) to suit the student's level.
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
I feel da-dirty. I've no idea da-why. :shock:
pas encore, j'erre toujours.