Anyone like to improvise?
Hi. I have always had a desire to be able to sit at the piano and just play - without knowing what I will play. It seems to be a daunting task, but since I found a great teacher who was classically trained before becoming a professional jazz pianist, I have made some progress. When I don’t feel like practicing I sit at the piano and play a simple chord sequence - for example Fm7, Bbm7, Cm7, Fm7 - and find notes and phrases that sound good to me.
Does anyone else improvise or plan to learn how to? It would be good to share ideas.
20 replies
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My son, improvises often and as a result many of his compositions have an improvisitory feel to them. In fact, one reason we ended up with his current teacher was because he wanted to learn historical improvisation and we found his teacher through that search. I don't improvise... yet.
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HI Ken -- I started improvising after I had learned enough theory and had tried to learn some pieces by ear (in my case they happened to be in F or E-flat major, so I got familiar with progressions in those keys) and actually the theory cemented when I learned a few Beatles songs on both guitar and piano. Anyway, I began improvising more when I didn't have the time to practice or the mental energy to learn pieces. As far as I can tell, most improvising is some manner of playing through chord progressions, but getting advanced stylistically and rhythmically, so I don't just sound like an emo teenager, is harder. Sounds like you are on the right track with your teacher.
As an extra note, I was stealthily put on a program to play at a family wedding while people gathered in the church -- it wasn't clear if they wanted me to play for sure, but when I showed up my name was on the program! So I went to the front of the church and improvised and it was fine. If I can do it, most others surely can! Have fun. -
Love to improvise! It's great you have a teacher that is both classical and jazz as they will be able to help you transition from note reading to the freedom of improvising. It's a lovely feeling to be comfortable harmonizing a melody over a chord progression. Jeremy Siskind has some nice videos on Tonebase on improvising. Have you checked them out?
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Hi Ken. I have learnt a lot of jazz theories. Totally would love to sit down and play any chord progressions. There are much to learn and not as easy as I thought. Still prodding on and loving the jazzy tones. Glad you asked.
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Great to hear that I am not alone in my journey to learn how to improvise well. My teacher tells me to “play fewer notes, leave space, do not have a fixed left-hand rhythm - rather have the left hand support what the right hand is doing.” Sounds easy enough right :|
I will record a couple of my favourite chord progressions and post them.
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Hi Ken
I’ve been dabbling in jazz and improv for some years and had teachers over the years , it was a struggle at the beginning, particularly as with most classically trained pianists , I had never learned to play by ear which I think is essential in order to progress in this area
but I think I’ve made some progress
below is my arrangement /improv of fats Waller’s jitterbug waltz, I originally posted for the community concert last January
Jitterbug waltz
https://youtu.be/gJLgT-rEotw?si=fzV34FWhCkExulrJk
It would be great to continue this stream where people could post their work in this area
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Hello fellow improvisers. I thought I would share part of my journey from “I wish I could just sit at the piano and play” to “I used to wish I could just sit at the piano and play” by showing one of the first routines I was given by my teacher. It is a simple repeated I-IV in Eb Major (that’ll be Eb Major 7 - Ab Major 7) in the left hand with notes from the Eb Major scale in the right hand. There may be bits of the Eb Major Pentatonic and C Blues scales in there as well, as they are derivatives of Eb Major.
As you will know, the point of improvising is making it up as you go along, and this means that some of the improv sounds good (note to self: add this to my vocabulary) while other bits don’t sound so good (note to self: … :)
I still play this routine every day along with more advanced sequences using multiple scale changes, for example, II-V-I-VI-ii-v-i.
What improv exercises do you use?
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Improvising has been my main way of playing the piano for my whole life. I'd love to know what other folks are doing on ToneBase with improvisation, and to trade notes, ideas, comments and performances.
I play mostly standards and pop tunes, but nothing's safe from my giving it a try. Here are a few samples of my playing that I've used in some ToneBase events.
Heart and Soul (Hoagy Carmichael) (with some help from Herman's Hermits):
Bewitched (Rodgers and Hart) from a ToneBase Halloween Community Concert (in which I'm experimenting with trying to incorporate a riff from the F# minor Fugue from Book 2 of the Well Tempered Clavier that I was working on at the time, as well as to quote a riff from a piece that one of the other Tonebase participants was working on) :
Sleigh Ride (Leroy Anderson & Mitchell Parish) - as recorded for a ToneBase Winter holiday concert:
I have hundreds of audio only recordings that I've made over the years. Just starting to experiment with video after joining ToneBase. the App I'm using is LumaFusion - it's very inexpensive and allows you to include fade in and out of up to 6 different video sources if you can find enough devices to film them.