This is exactly the way these scales should be explained to everybody - great job! However, you forgot the Lydian Dominant Scale, in caase of G it is derived from the D melodic minor(for those asking), generally it resolves never to C, but to everywhere else, and it appears in almost every standard.
By the way, your channel for jazz piano is the best I have seen, and I have seen a lot. I have been trying to learn jazz for a long time. Your approach and philosophy are perfect for me at this time in my development. Your lessons show concrete exercises that are also extendable. Keep up the good work!
Check out all these scale choices for a V7 chord. I hope you find it helpful!
Great solo ideas ! Bravo !
Thanks for great tutorial. Really love your approach. ❤❤❤
This is exactly the way these scales should be explained to everybody - great job! However, you forgot the Lydian Dominant Scale, in caase of G it is derived from the D melodic minor(for those asking), generally it resolves never to C, but to everywhere else, and it appears in almost every standard.
I left that out intentionally. That scale is being covered in its own video. It’s not as simple and straightforward as one might think.
@fabiodemiguel4163 it's just mixo #11
Super useful! Thanks Tim.
Excellent!
Thank you!
😅😅😅 love you forever
😅thanks a lot
I think the notation or scale degrees might be incorrect in the notation for the Altered Dominant example?
oy, yes. My apologies!!!
it should be 1 b9 #9 3 #11 b13 b7 1
By the way, your channel for jazz piano is the best I have seen, and I have seen a lot. I have been trying to learn jazz for a long time. Your approach and philosophy are perfect for me at this time in my development. Your lessons show concrete exercises that are also extendable. Keep up the good work!
@@ericware5462 Thank you so much! I'm glad it's helping. I'll keep going
This is a breat video but im curious if A.I helped at all🤔❤❤
No AI here.