pianomankris
New member
Other genre is bossa. Put sharp and flat of 9,11,13 all over place.
So that's all there is to it!
If that's all there was to it, we'd all be playing fluently in the various jazz idioms!!
In reality, there are no short cuts to becoming good at something (granted though, good tuition can save years of unlearning). I make my students very much aware of that when they start lessons - that if they wish to become good at the piano, they can expect at the very least 5 years of hard work.
To the thread starter - if you ever hear someone saying they will be able to teach you jazz (or whatever) in a few lessons, then stay well back. It's a long process in learning anything, and any short cut you take is something you'll have to go back over in the future anyway.
As an aside - Kongwee - you mentioned some jazz dominant chords - when I was writing the jazz threads, i'm sure I forgot to mention the commonly used 13 shape - just play root and b7 in the LH, and play a minor chord a tone above in the RH.
i.e. C13 would be C and Bb in LH, and a Dm in the RH.
George Shearing uses this voicing a lot. It's very warm.
-Edit- I just noticed you were meaning # and b versions of the extensions. Ah well, the one above is worth knowing anyway as a starter for ten

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