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Lesson time: (9min 58sec)
This lesson is part of the course Exploring Jazz Piano: Funktionsharmonik und Modi
Watch this lesson for free below.
Lesson transcript:
So, all the chords in "Open Up" are from the scale of F. This means that if you wish, when you improvise in the right hand, you could just use notes from that scale. They'll fit all those chords.
An easy way to improvise, presuming you're playing chords in the left hand (which is what I did the second time around), is:
You could use any of the notes from the scale of F, but it would be useful to practice some patterns. Here are a few patterns to try:
You could play the same rhythm as the tune, if you wish, and you could arpeggiate them to make it sound more melodic, maybe in swing quavers or triplets. In fact, you can use all four notes of the four-note chords; the seventh chords could be a scale pattern as well.
Here's a great exercise that goes through all seventh chords in the key, alternately up and down. Just check out the fingering. Basically, we're doing this:
So, you'll notice I crossed over. It's a fantastic exercise! Try that in other keys as well.
If you want to follow the chords a little more closely, you might think about playing different modes of the scale.
The push on the second bar is really important. You see how that comes with the B flat? That means that you're not playing all the left-hand chords on the beat, making it sound much more jazzy.
Let's try the same thing and include the A minor 7, three chords: 1, 2, 3. I'll play that pattern with the metronome now at 100 beats per minute, swing quaver.
If you wish, you could play the whole scale using a scale loop like we did in part one of the course. This time, I'll go up to the three chord as well: the A minor.
That deals with the first four bars.
For the second part of the tune, the key center is more based on C7, so we'll use the scale of F starting on C. This is called a Mixolydian mode.
You can refer to part one of the course if you're still a bit uncertain about the names of these modes. This is like a C major scale with a flattened seventh, and it fits a C7 chord, but we're still basically using notes of the F scale.
Here it is with the left-hand chords and the metronome in five-finger position, 3, 4. Notice all the chords are short except for the C incubated one, the D minor, which is held for longer.
Now I'll do the same thing, performing the whole scale in a scale loop. I've looped it so that it's the same in every bar, every two bars.
In the left hand, I'm going to go not just C7 to D minor but also up to E half diminished. This deals with the second line of the piece, the C7 section, bars five to eight. Then, that's going to come back again eight bars later.
For the third section, we're going to have to play more around a B flat tonality.
So, we're using the scale of F starting on B flat. It's not a B flat scale because we've got an E natural in it, this is called a Lydian scale.
You can practice with:
If I want to do the whole scale, I'll probably want to start with a second finger. This helps with regular scale fingering, avoiding the thumb on a black note.
Notice the articulation is a bit different with the chords. In this third section of the tune, you might remember it was a bit more legato.
The rhythm is exactly what I'm playing in the left hand, second time round on the track for the F bars and then the C bars. That pattern is repeated but going to the third chord, with the C going up to E half diminished.
So far, everything has the same rhythm. But the last section, the Lydian section in B flat, goes more like this:
Now you need to put all that together. Go back to the track; you can switch between performance mode and the backing track just by toggling.
In the backing track mode, you won't hear any piano. You'll just hear the bass and drums. You can play the tune as written with the two-handed voicings, or you can just play the chords in the left hand like I do the second time.
This is when you'll want to put all these scales into practice. Start by practicing those routines, the five-finger positions, or the scale loops. But eventually, your aim is to keep those rhythms going in the left hand and improvise more freely in the right hand.
Good luck!

Der von der Kritik gefeierte Jazzpianist und Komponist Tim Richards ist einer der erfahrensten Jazzpädagogen Großbritanniens und unterrichtet seit über 30 Jahren privat Klavier sowie am Morley College, am Goldsmiths College, an der University of Surrey, in den Premises Studios und an weiteren Orten im Vereinigten Königreich und im Ausland. Er hat zahlreiche Titel für Schott Music produziert, darunter die zweibändigen Bestseller Exploring Jazz Piano, Blues, Boogie & Gospel Collection und das gefeierte Improvising Blues Piano. Gemeinsam mit John Crawford ist er zudem Koautor von Exploring Latin Piano und Brazilian Piano Collection.In jüngerer Zeit hat Schott Jazz, Latin & Modern Collection (15 Stücke für Klavier solo) veröffentlicht, das Originale von Tim Richards neben Stücken von Duke Ellington und Thelonious Monk vereint, sowie das zweibändige Set Beginning Jazz Piano (jetzt ein zweiteiliger MusicGurus-Kurs).„Die wahre Freude an Tims Musik… liegt darin, dass sie zugleich enorm lehrreich und ein großes Vergnügen zu spielen ist. Jeder, der auch nur das geringste Interesse daran hat, Jazzpiano zu lernen oder zu unterrichten, sollte sich unbedingt eine Sammlung von Tims Büchern zulegen.“ PianoDaoAls Interpret ist Tim seit den 1980er-Jahren eine feste Größe der britischen Jazzszene und spielte auch den Blues mit britischen und amerikanischen Legenden wie Otis Grand, Earl Green, Dana Gillespie, Larry Garner, Joe Louis Walker und Mojo Buford. Er hat über ein Dutzend Alben als Bandleader veröffentlicht (mit vielen der besten Londoner Jazzmusiker, darunter Pete King, Gilad Atzmon, Tony Kofi, Jason Yarde, Seb Rochford, Ed Jones, Dick Pearce und viele andere) und ist mit Besetzungen vom Duo bis zum Nonett durch ganz Europa getourt. Seine jüngste Aufnahme, das Album ‚Telegraph Hill‘ des sechsköpfigen Hextet, wurde im The Observer als "Eine wahre Freude von Anfang bis Ende" beschrieben. Weitere Informationen finden sich auf seiner Website www.timrichards.ndo.co.uk read more