Misty Jazz Piano Lesson
Misty is one of the most popular jazz ballads and the distinctive melody is immediately recognisable amongst musicians. The tune is written in the key of Eb major and follows an A1 – A2 – B – A2 Form. The tonality is primarily major with some altered harmony sprinkled in here and there.
First Learn The Melody
Before diving into the chords of Misty it’s a good idea to get a solid grasp of the melody. Find a strong vocal recording of the tune and study how the melody is phrased.
The melodic range of Misty is 2 octaves with the lowest note being the F below middle C and the highest note being F an octave above middle C. This is a wide spread for the melody of a jazz standard and so your right hand will be kept busy when playing this tune!
Practice Tips
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This tune can also be played with a left hand stride style, check out the practice exercises in this course for more information.
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Take a listen to Erroll Garner's version of this tune. This is the definitive recording of Misty.
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Check out this lesson where we explore the Sus13 chords to 13#11 tritone subs. of Misty.
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Start with the basic R-3-7 voicings and then experiment with the different extensions. Stop on each chord and identify/visualise the extensions 9/11/13.
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You may need to run up and down the scales to help you visualise the upper extensions. Try adding in 9s and 13s over dominant chords, 9s and 11s on minor chords, and 9s and 13s on major chords.
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It’s through this process of exploration and discovery that we get a better understanding of how harmony works.
Adam Powell says
Will you ever make these lessons available on midi format?
Hayden says
Hi Adam, yes sure I have midi files for 13 of the jazz standards. I’ll email them over to you now. I’ll also add them to the Transcription Page in the Pro Member Area: http://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-standard-transcriptions/ Cheers, Hayden
Adam Powell says
Would you consider doing a Misty tutorial in the style of Erroll Garner? Just a thought that crossed my mind.
Hayden says
Hi Adam,
Yes I think that’s a great idea. It would also be nice to revisit the tune with a stride style. Leave that with me.
A “Misty Part 2” tutorial has been in the pipeline for a while now!
Cheers, Hayden
Adam Powell says
Can’t wait but I guess I will have to. LOL. Thanks in advance for your hard work.
Ivan says
Hello Hayden: my first question about practicing: should I practice one hand at the time (especially bars 7 and beyond in Misty) or should I make an effort to use both hands even from the beginning? What is a more effective approach, speaking generally?
Thanks, Ivan
Hayden says
Hey Ivan,
Yes bars 7 and 8 in the transcription are quite challenging… there’s three things going on there: sus chords, tritone substitution, and also altered dominant chords.
The most important thing is that you are analysing the scale degrees of the notes in relation to the underlying harmony. Try to make an effort to consciously analyse each note to identify the primary chord tones, extensions, and alterations if applicable.
You will find this very difficult to begin with, particularly with those altered dominant chords so don’t get too hung up on it. Just copy the notes, even if right now the theory doesn’t make sense, the full understanding will come with time.
When playing ‘spread voicings’ – where the notes of the chord are spaced out 2 octaves or more – you will likely find the voicings sound ‘incomplete’ with just half of the notes and so my recommendation would be to practice very slowly but hands together.
As you progress through the course you will become more comfortable playing hands together.
Hope this helps 🙂
Hayden
Ivan says
It does help, now I understand better the basic approach and playing both hands certainly makes the chords sound so much better. ‘Slowly, slowly, catchy monkey’, right? Thank you. Ivan
Hayden says
Awesome! Yes that’s right Ivan… if you can’t play it slowly and accurately, then you can’t play it fast and accurately… that’s the rule I have always followed 🙂
Cheers,
Hayden
Claudio says
Hey Hayden, at 7.35 you describe a Eb6. Isn‘t the 6th the same as the 13th? Why do you use the unusual even number in that Notation? Best, Claudio
Hayden says
Hi Claudio 👋
Good question!
An important rule you need to understand:
If the 7th is not present in the chord, then it’s always the 6th.
If the 7th is present in the chord, then it’s always the 13th.
We name chords by their highest extension:
If you see Eb13, it means that you should have the b7 in the chord, and the 13th is the highest extension.
However, Eb6 means that the 7th should not be in the chord, and so in that case the 13 becomes the 6.
You will also see Eb69, which contains the 6 and 9, but no 7th.
Does that make sense?
Confusing I know!… If you’d like me to elaborate, I’m happy to explain further.
Cheers,
Hayden
Claudio says
Great Hayden, thank you for the quick reply and good explanation. Just to get sure another (slightly academic) question in this regard: So, if I have a triad and just the 9th as a extension (without the 7th), does it mean, I call it e.g. Eb2? Am I right, if I say that this is not true, since the 2th is the highest extension though, but the “normal” triad contains a 5th which is higher? But in this case: How I would name a 9th chord which contains no 7th? Aha, would this would be Eb59?
Hayden says
Hi Claudio… another good question!
In that case, the chord would be called Ebadd9. This means an Eb Major triad with the 9th added in. The 9th adds some texture to the chord which can be a nice effect.
When neither the 6th or 7th is present but the 9 is, effectively you have a major triad with the 9th. so we always say ‘add9’.
There are a few jazz standards where we have used this voicing, but it is not as common as the other voicings that we cover in detail in the PianoGroove course.
‘Eb59’ doesn’t exist, it would always be ‘Ebadd9’, but remember that Eb69 is a much more common voicing… certainly one that you should familiarise yourself with…
Try playing Eb and Bb low down in the left hand (root and 5) and then play G-C-F in the right hand (3-6-9) – this is nice because we have a stack of 4ths in the right hand which creates a lovely texture. I use this voicing a lot so you will come across it throughout the PianoGroove course.
Remember that this ‘formula’ will work in any key… LH: root and 5th. RH: 3-6-9. Always think in terms of scale degrees so you have the ‘blueprint’ to apply the voicing to all 12 keys.
You could use this voicing as the I chord in a II-V-I. For example, a II-V-I in Eb Major, try playing F-9, Bb13, and then Eb6/9.
I hope this helps… any further questions let me know.
Cheers,
Hayden
Diego says
I had the same questions as Claudio and I decided to check the comments section to see if there was a “6th/13th” related question. I was right! That was a great explanation, very clear! I am taking notes othe this! haha
By the way, I’m a fan of the “add9” chords, I do use them in pop/ballad songs and I found very revealing that an “add9” chord is built when the 6th and the 7th are not present in the chord, or in this case a triad.
I’m sure I’m not the only one that considers all the courses in PianoGroobe very revealing!
Thanks Hayden!
Hayden says
Hi Diego,
Thanks for the comment and I’m glad to hear you are enjoying the lessons.
Absolutely there is usually a bunch of great questions and answers in the lesson comments so always take a quick browse down here. This is the best place to post lesson-specific questions so that other students can benefit from the questions/answers too.
Yes the 6/9 chord is a really beautiful voicing, both on major and minor chords. The only difference is the major or minor 3rd.
I recommend to practice this voicing as a ‘landing point’ in 251 progressions. For example you could complete this whole step drills which uses ii-9 to V13 to Imaj9, but practice resolving into a Imaj9 chord, and also a I6/9 chord as a variation. The 6/9 chord has softer, little bit richer sound, and it’s particularly nice to use when ending a tune.
Here’s the drill I mention: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/extended-251-progression-drill/
Have fun working on this stuff.
Talk soon, cheers,
Hayden
Natasha says
Hi Hayden, thank you for this great transcription, very helpful ! In bar 2, the A7 (#9, #5 ) chord, I can see the #9, C, but not the #5 which would be F natural, is that correct ?
Hayden says
Hi Natasha,
Awesome… glad to hear the transcription is useful!
Good question! Yes you are correct… F would be the #5. It’s great to see that you are analysing the harmony numerically 😊
Something to be aware of Natasha: when you see “#5#9” , “b9” , “#9” , “#5” or “alt” in a chord symbol, you have the creative freedom to choose which alterations you include or exclude. Try the ones specified first, but there is always room to experiment with different combinations.
The presence of any of these alterations in a chord symbol, implies the altered mode. You can find an in-depth study here: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/altered-scale-improv/
If it’s an altered V7 chord, which in this case it most certainly is (because the #5 is in the melody) then you can pick and choose between single alteration, double alteration, or perhaps an upper structure triad.
In this specific case, I liked the sound without the #5 in there. It sounded a little too rich for me, and the #9 on the top gave the chord enough colour in my opinion. But, that’s just my opinion…
A nice exercise would be to add the #5 (F) into the voicing, play it a few times and really listen to how it sounds. Then take the #5 out of the voicing and again play a few times. Try to build an aural appreciation of the difference in sound so that you can decide when you want that #5 colour in there.
Remember that the formula for that altered voicing will work in any key:
Left hand: Root and b7
Right hand: 3, b7 and #9 (or 3, #5, b7 & #9)
Obviously the pitch will be different, but the colour and texture of the chord will be the same and so having an aural awareness of the sounds of different alterations will help you pick and choose your chord voicings more wisely.
Always experiment Natasha… I’ve stumbled across some great sounds just by thinking “what if I added…” or “what if I omitted….” etc…
Hope this helps 🙂
Cheers,
Hayden
Natasha says
Thanks Hayden 🙂
Dave says
That Erroll Garner version!!!!! Holy Smokes!!!!!!
Brian says
Hi Hayden, can you please explain the progression of chords you play starting with the G7 chord at :34 which looks to be the 1 – b7 – 9 – 11 – 13 – 1. You end the tutorial with just the Eb6 chord which sounds a bit plain after listening to these nice chords at the start 🙂
Hayden says
Hi Brian,
Yes here’s some explanation on that progression that I sent to another student:
That particular sequence is intermediate/advanced level. The chord you highlight as 1-b7 / 9-1-13-1 is a 13sus voicing. That is a voicing for G13sus. Another way you can look at it, is the shell in the left hand (root and b7) and then a minor 7th chord built from the 9th to get 9-11(or4)-13-root in your right hand.
The pattern is moving from the 13sus chord to an altered dominant tritone sub. It’s a lovely sound.
Instead of G7, we play G13sus then to the tritone with 13#11 extensions which is Db13#11 – this is a half step above C7 which is the next chord. But instead of playing C7, again we play C13sus and then instead of going staring to F7, we play the tritone again which is F#7 and again we add the 13#11 extensions/alterations.
This formula for 13 sus chord is R-4-b7 in the left hand, and then a minor 7th chord off the 9th. For example, C13sus is C-F-Bb in the left and then a D-7 chord in the right hand. That’s an important formula to remember and works in any key.
Then for the 13#11 chord, it’s a major triad off the 9th to get 9-#11-13 in the right hand. You can play this over R-3-b7 or 3-b7 or even R-b7… all sound nice to my ears.
If you’d like to study more in that area, check out the lesson on Sus Chords where we cover similar examples: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/understanding-sus-chords/ – the sus chord is effectively ‘a temporary stepping stone’ on dominant chords.
If you’d like me to explain further, let me know.
Regarding the ending – this is a beginner tutorial so I wanted to keep some bits simple. It’s about time I created a “Misty Part 2” lesson where we add an introduction, ending and stride improvisation.
In the meantime, check out this course Brian: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/intros-endings-turnarounds/ – we use the 1625 progression to create improvised introductions and endings. It’s very useful.
Hope this helps 🙂
Cheers,
Hayden
Brian says
Thank you!
Dave says
Hayden, These 13sus dominant chord, as you have them voiced, have R-b7-4-13, but no 3rd. I played them with the 3rd, but it sounds bad with the 4th. Is that why you omitted the 3rd?
Hayden says
Hi Dave,
Check out these lessons which will answer all of your questions:
Introduction To Sus Chords: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/understanding-sus-chords/
Advanced Tritone Substitution: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/advanced-tritone-substitution/
The sus chord is a ‘temporary stepping stone’ and is often played before the dominant chord.
The suspended 4th wants to resolve down a half step to the 3rd, and you can use this movement in your progressions.
Check out the lessons above and let me know if you have further questions.
Cheers!
Hayden
Nolan says
Hi Hayden,
Would you happen to have the sheet music that you used to be downloadable?
Thanks!
Hayden says
Hi Nolan, thanks for getting in touch.
Yes that’s right, we provide full, note-for-note transcriptions for our jazz standard lessons.
This is available for Pro students. When you are logged into the website, you will see an additional option in the menu “Downloads” and here you can download the Chord Changes, Transcription, Midi File, and Audio File for each lesson.
I will send you this transcription via email so you can sample the transcriptions 🙂
All the best,
Hayden
Iván says
Good Morning Hayden.I m already playing this tune perfectly.What lessons should i take if i want to improvise on it or play it with a Singer?Thanks
Hayden says
Hi Ivan,
Check out this lesson: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/advanced-tritone-substitution/
and also Lyndol’s course on Accompanying Singers: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/how-to-accompany-singers/
Cheers!
Hayden
Iván says
Thanks!
Milan Claeys Bouuaert says
How would you harmonically explain the progression in the second line of the bridge? First line we get a 251 of the IV, but then we get a 2-5 that doesn’t resolve and instead goes into a classic V/V – V – I. Why does this work? How should I think of this in terms of what scale to play over it?
Hayden says
Hi Milan!
Good question.
The A-7 and D7 should be viewed as a 25 in G Major, which is a half step below the 251 in Ab which started the bridge. The harmony is moving chromatically. Chromatic 25s and 251s are a common feature of jazz standards.
Next…. D7 and F7 share a lot of similarities as they are dominant chords a minor 3rd apart, and so if you play 3-5-b7-b9 of each of those chords, you end up with the same notes. Check out our lessons on Diminished Chords for more information on this relationship.
As you correctly point out, the bridge then finishes on a V/V – V – I.
I would advise that you try not to think “this scale over this chord”. That approach will make your improvisation sound overly step-wise and linear. Instead my recommendation would be to transcribe a number of solid 251 melodies from your favourite players, apply them to all 12 keys, and then use them in practice whilst playing over jazz standards.
Our advanced improv course explains this process: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/advanced-improvisation-course/
Hope this helps!
Cheers,
Hayden
James Paterson says
In think second bar the Eb13(b9), you play it with the 1,3,13 and dominant 7 but you don’t ever include the b9 which should be an E, why?
Hayden says
Hi James,
Great question!
In jazz you have a lot of creative freedom to interpret the chords and melody as you see fit.
The alteration(s) that are specified in the chord symbol will work well, but you can always experiment with the other alterations – b9, #9, #11, and #5/b13.
You can also leave the alteration out as i did in this example. You could even play a simple voicing such as the root, 3rd and 7th.
That’s the beauty of jazz music, it leaves the performer/arranger with a lot of creative freedom and options. This adds to the spontaneity, creativity, and excitement of the jazz genre.
Here’s 3 of our forum threads that specifically address chords and voicings. I share insights and guidance on how to voice any chord you come across:
Understanding Rootless Voicings: https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/understanding-rootless-voicings/945
Naming Jazz Chord Extensions: https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/naming-jazz-chord-extensions/942
How To Add Alterations: https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/how-to-add-alterations-to-chords-in-jazz/943
If you have any further questions join the discussions 🙂
Cheers,
Hayden
Ahmad Dawood says
Hello…i am trying this Jazz Lessons that i found sooo usefull and soon i will participate so
i Decided to buy the New Real Book …so i need your Help for 3 Questions
1- when i browsed the List of tunes in this book i did nt understand the last paragraph in the index which i marked it with Red Rectangle
2- The New Real Book does NOT cover all tunes in the Lessons for example(So What tune)
3- what is the different between this book and the traditional RealBook ??
Thaanks
Hayden says
Hi Ahmad,
Glad to hear you are enjoying the lessons.
1) From just looking at your screenshot I’m unsure what the red rectangle is referring to… perhaps this is explained somewhere in the book? I can see that there is a jazz standard name and a page number to find the tune.
2) Yes there are 1000s of jazz standards and so you will not find a RealBook that contains all of these tunes. The books listed on our Resources page are some of the best I have personally used.
3) There are many different RealBooks and many different editions of each. They contain different formatting, and different tunes as mentioned in point (2).
Always remember to spend time listening to the recordings of the tunes you are working on, and this will help you with learning and memorising the tunes without the lead sheet in front of you (which is the end goal).
Hope this helps!
Cheers,
Hayden
Ahmad Dawood says
Hi Hayden
thanks for your help … i am fully enjoying this really excellent lessons
what i ment by the red rectangle is the publisher says in the index that not all copies may contain some tunes (like misty tune) ,this depends on country .. thats why i marked the tunes that r not written in the new real book
i dont understand
secondly ,,in the lessons the teacher illustrated the (so what tune) and this was not found in the new real book
thats why i asked b4 purchasing a copy
thanks in advance
Hayden says
Hi Ahmad,
Fill out one of the contact forms on the website, and I will help you find the right books 🙂
Cheers!
Hayden
Guillaume says
Hello Hayden,
I was wondering, what you teach us is a arrangment for solo piano, but if we want to play the standards with other people, how and where can we learn to play all these standards.
My second question is if i want to be able to say that i know a standard, should i memorize all the chords progressions in it, maybe to be able to improvise on it afterward
You are being really helpful in your answers,
Guillaume
Hayden says
Hi Guillaume 👋
Read through this thread of Lyndol and myself performing: https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/course-demonstration-by-lyndol-hayden/1995
This course talks specifically about playing with other musicians: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/how-to-play-jazz-band-jam-musicians/
For the second question, yes, you should memorise all of the chords for jazz standards. This might seem impossible at first, but I promise that with time it becomes much easier.
The trick is to memorise the form (AABA, ABAC etc..) and then learn the chords numerically. This way you break down the 32 bars into much less information.
Then you will soon realise that most of the standards follow a very similar format making them much easier to remember.
Check out the first 2 lessons from the course above and that will answer this question in more detail 🙂
Cheers,
Hayden
Ariel Jupiter says
Hi Hayden,
In the section “Extensions” in the tutorial the first chord Fm9 you are using a Kenny Barron voicing which sounds wonderful. I started to play around with it trying to be creative and find alternations of my own and in the first chord I find using the Herbie Hancock voicing Fm11 chord – left hand keys: F,C – Right hand keys Aflat, Bflat, Eflat, G which sounds also very nice at least for me 🙂
Is that a classic situation on which Herbie Hancock voicing can be used?
Thanks.
Ariel.
Hayden says
Hi Ariel 👋
Good question.
We have a lot of freedom to choose the extensions we want to include in our voicings.
The key difference between the Kenny Barron Voicing, and the Herbie Hancock Voicing is the note at the top. When playing jazz standards, it’s always important to analyse the melody note in terms of the scale degree of the underlying harmony. For example…
The Kenny Barron Voicing has the 11th on top and so a ‘classic situation’ to use it is when the 11th is in the melody for a minor chord.
The Herbie Hancock Voicing has the 9th on top and so a ‘classic situation’ to use it is when the 9th is in the melody for a minor chord.
That being said, we could play the Herbie Hancock voicing and add the 11th (Bb) on top, so our left hand plays F & C, and our right hand plays Ab, Bb, Eb, G, & Bb.
None of these rules are set in stone…
It’s great that you are playing around with the voicings and being creative to add your own touch. That’s exactly how we figure new things out and there is lots to be learnt in the process of discovery, so definitely keep that up.
The first 4 lessons in our course on “Arranging For Solo Piano” cover lots of different voicings for major, minor, and dominant chords – https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/how-to-play-solo/ – it might be nice to check those lessons out.
Cheers!
Hayden
Ariel Jupiter says
Hi Hayden,
Thank you very much for the reply.
I went through the tutorial again today as I was struggling a bit with performing the tune with the extended chords, but now 3 months later after I practiced the 3-7 tutorial a lot the chord extensions were easy (well at least easy considering to where I was 3 months ago 🙂 .
I think it’s a good idea to go through tutorials that I already did a few months ago, but now my understanding and piano technique is much smoother so I am more into the business and I also realized that there were a lot of details that I was missing when first viewing the tutorials.
Thanks.
Ariel.
Hayden says
Hi Ariel 👋
That’s great news.
The R-3-7 really is the foundation of the harmony. Once we can visualise those tones and add the melody on top, we are already playing lead sheets effectively.
We can then use the extensions – and alterations as you will see in the upcoming courses – to enhance, or ‘garnish’ these basic R-3-7 voicings and create a huge variety of colours and textures. That’s the fun part!
It’s wonderful to hear on your progress Ariel. Yes I think it’s a good idea to revisit some of the earlier tutorials, but at the same time feel free to experiment with the more advanced ones too.
The thing with standards is that the more we learn, the easier it becomes to learn new ones. After we can play 20 or 30 tunes, we begin to see lots of similarities in the form, the chords, the harmonies, the melodies etc.. and so each time we pick up a new tune it becomes easier and easier.
Thanks and talk soon!
Hayden
wesen3000 says
I started working on actual tunes after drilling a lot of chords. I did a note for note (well almost I’m sure) transcription of the arrangement you go through in the video. I am picking out the voicings/harmonizations I wouldn’t have thought of or have trouble with and practice them on their own. The provided transcription is a bit too complicated (with the substitutions, etc…), but the video version is just perfect.
I hope this helps. I will provide the parts and exercise I practice in a follow up post.
wesen3000 says
Here are the drills I currently have in my rotation.
Guy Philippe Décarie says
What are the seven little vertical bars at the bottom of your videos? Probably something obvious! Thanks,
Hayden says
Hi Guy,
Thanks for letting me know about this.
I have just emailed you with more information.
Cheers,
Hayden
Caryln Loh says
Hi Hayden,
Can I just check why is there Db in Eb13b9?
donna1 says
Hello Hayden
I have the real book as shown in your lesson (and recommended as part of the resources). However, Misty is not included as in the index of the book it states *standards supplement USA only and Misty is one of the standards with an * next to it.
Is it possible to just get Misty in its own or is there any other version you recommend? I’m thinking when I’m able to actually play your arrangements competently, what would you suggest to help improvement?
Thanks – enjoying the lesson – my third standard (beginner)
Donna
Hayden says
Hi Donna 👋🏻
Yes I will send you my recommended versions via email shortly.
Lead sheets are a great tool when starting out with jazz piano and very useful to help build a repertoire.
I would suggest the following for improvement:
Once we have learnt an arrangement, we should try to memorise the form and the chord changes.
Misty follows an AABA Form and so almost 75% of the tune follows the exact same chord changes. Understanding this makes the process of memorisation much easier.
I discussed this in length in my recent Live Seminar, check it out here: https://www.pianogroove.com/live-seminars/arranging-jazz-standards/
Also check out this lesson: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/common-jazz-forms/
The next step is to start to tweak the arrangement, add your own touches, and make it your own. We do this by listening and transcribing.
I like to make a playlist on YouTube or Spotify of all the versions of a song that I like, I explain more here in the forum:
– https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/spotify-playlists/3242
also check out this thread:
– https://www.pianogroove.com/community/t/where-to-go-from-here-for-a-beginner/3838/6
I then work out little thing from each. It might be the way the melody is played, it might be a little fill or run or chord substitution.
We are playing these tunes for all of our lives and so we should be always adding to and enhancing our arrangements.
Any other questions let me know and look out for my email shortly.
Cheers,
Hayden
donna1 says
Thank you Hayden – very helpful. Thanks also for the prompt reply, it looks like awful weather this weekend so Misty will be getting a lot of my time 😁
Thanks again
Donna
robert904018 says
Hello Hayden — do you have a transcript of the version of Misty that you demonstrate/play during the second half of the video for this lesson? The “Misty Transcript” pdf download arrangement is different.
Vincent DeRisio says
Hayden,
I have been playing measures 7 and 8 over and over because it is so beautiful!
In the real book those two measures are G-7 to C7flat9 then F-7 to Bflat7 which to me is 2-5 for F and 2-5 for E flat respectively.
I would have never thought to substitute it this way.
So is the sus the sub for the minor 7 in the real book (like your G13sus for G-7 ) with the tritone serving only as a passing chord or is the tritone the sub for the G chord and the Sus is really a sub for ANOTHER minor 7 like Dm7 (implied minor chord)?
So I am thinking that the G13sus4 to Dflat13 #11 (measure 7 first two beats) is really a sub for Dm7 to G7 i.e. a 2-5 in C.
Is that right? The reason I am obsessed with those two measure is I want to apply it to other songs because the sound is so awesome!!
Best!
Vince
don156644 says
One thing I would like to see is a step-by-step process of adding a very simple improvisation to a jazz standard. For example …. First just chord tones …. then, perhaps pentatonic scale …. then, include major scale …. etc. I never see that any place. Of course, the difficulty that arises is usually handling the left-hand chording during this improv. But it would be very helpful to see someone actually doing it instead of just alluding to it in other lessons on improv.
bicudoalex says
Hi Hayden!
Some questions for you…
1) That F7 LH F Eb A is impossible for me…is it ok to play the A in the RH?
2) The tune is hard for me to learn and it becomes way harder when you do the extensions and reharmonization. Is it really a beginner level tutorial? Am I supposed to nail it before I continue the course?
Thanks!
Hayden says
Hi Alex,
To answer your questions:
1) Yes absolutely it’s fine to play the A in the right hand. Ultimately we all have different sized hands and so there is no “one-size-fits-all” when it comes to fingering for voicings.
Use what is most comfortable.
That being said, perhaps you can roll the notes in your left hand and use the pedal. Another option is to play this in a stride style where we play the root note, and then play a rootless voicing.
I introduce stride in this lesson: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/beginner-stride-piano-lesson/
I would highly recommend that you start on the “Bluesy Jazz Piano Course” where we learn the tune “Georgia”, here is the full course: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/bluesy-stride-piano-beginners/ – I created this course for beginners and it has had some great feedback.
2) Good question here.
You must understand that we are playing these tunes for all of our lives, and so our arrangements are continually evolving. I have been playing this tune (Misty) for 15 years and every time that I play through it I can voice the chords differently, apply new theory, etc… so in that sense we never really “nail it”.
What I am showing you in this lesson is one possible way to interpret the song.
At your level, I recommend that you set a target to learn 10 or 15 tunes, and this will expose you to lots of different harmonic situations which is what you need at this stage.
You will naturally forget some of the arrangements along the way, so don’t fret about that. Also some of the tunes will resonate with you better than others, and these are the ones that you should add to your “VIP List” of tunes.
For example I have perhaps 5 or so tunes which I love, and these are my “go-to” tunes if I want to sit down and play freely. It’s very much an ongoing process and the arrangements are constantly evolving as you learn new theory.
I will send you an email shortly with some information that I send to new students.
Please continue to ask questions here in the comments section of each page. It helps me keep track of questions and it also makes the answers visible to other students who are studying on the website.
I hope that helps. :–)
Cheers,
Hayden
bicudoalex says
Hayden,
Thank you so much for your attention! Just to let you know, I’m already doing the Bluesy Stride Course and I’m really enjoying it, since I love the Blues and it really has a nice beginner approach.
Regarding your advice on learning 15 tunes, my doubt is when to “stop”. I should learn them with Spread or Shell Voicings until I play it fluently or once I play it all through, with all the stops and mistakes, I should move on to next and come back later to improve it? And when I should try to include rootless, so what etc?
Thanks a lot for your email as well, I believe it will be very helpful in this beginning!
bicudoalex says
Also, I couldn’t find the measures 7 and 8 people commented above…
Hayden says
This is an advanced reharmonisation, I explain it in detail at around the 10 minute mark in this lesson: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/advanced-tritone-substitution/
This is quite advanced so don’t worry about it right now. We learn sus chords and altered dominant chords in the upcoming courses.
I am in the process of creating a new beginner course around the tune “Misty” which focuses on the cocktail jazz piano style. I expect to have this ready in the next 3 or 4 weeks. It will follow the same structure as the course on “Georgia” highlighted above in my comment.
I will send you an update when the lessons are ready.
Cheers,
Hayden
pelss.nikolajs says
Hi, Hayden!
Silly question here – do you use sustain pedal in this tutorial? Thanks.
Niks
Hayden says
Hi Niks,
Yes I do indeed use the pedal. You might like to check out chapter 4 of this lesson where we discuss using the pedal for stride style over Misty: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/stride-style-for-ballads/
I use the pedal in virtually all of my jazz piano arrangements, particularly the ballads.
Also check out the full cocktail piano improv course where we cover this tune in more detail: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/cocktail-improvisation-for-beginners/
Let me know if I can help further.
Cheers,
Hayden
pelss.nikolajs says
Oh, such a quick response! I will check out the links, thank you!
Niks
goforasong says
Thoroughly enjoyed this tutorial, and appreciated your stepwise approach, i.e., root & melody, then root-3-7 & melody prior to tacking the whole tune. This is a great approach to developing a musical solution from a lead sheet.
I have to say, however, that, in the B section, my ears are not happy with the transition from Bbm7 to Bbmᴹ⁷ to Bbm7 in bar 18 (second bar of the B section). I listened to versions from Bee-gie Adair, Jim Brickman, The New York Lounge Quartett, and others, and found that many per-formers arpeggiate the chord in this section. Below is my solution to bar 18. I’m wondering if this solution makes sense to you?
Hayden says
Hi Peter,
Thanks for posting this and apologies for the late reply.
Yes indeed we can treat those 2 bars as a ‘vanilla’ 25 progression without the minor-major movement. It’s really a matter of taste. When we have a whole bar of a minor chord, the ‘minor line cliche’ is always an option to add more movement.
The way you are voicing the chords is totally fine, and even better that you have based this on the recordings that you like. That’s a really important point that you are tweaking your arrangements based on the recordings that you personally like.
I highly recommend you to check out the full course on “Misty – Cocktail Piano Improvisation” where I show different ways that we can navigate the tune from both harmonic and improv standpoints:
https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/cocktail-improvisation-for-beginners/
The Misty lesson here was created many years ago when I was still perfecting the PianoGroove tutorial style. The production quality of the course above is more fine-tuned and after many more years of playing and exploring this tune I feel that the teaching quality is better too.
Check out the course and let me know what you think.
Cheers,
Hayden
Mary L West says
Hello Hayden
Where exactly can we find the link to The Real Book? I’ve looked under resources several times, and cannot locate it.
Hayden says
Hi Mary,
I will send you an email now with some more detailed Real Book options.
Cheers,
Hayden
maurizio955 says
Hi Hayden
in the fifth measure Abm9 Db13 there would seem to be a II V but then I find Ebmaj7, how con it be justified harminically ?
Thank you
Maurizio
Hayden says
Hi Maurizio 👋
Great question!
This is called the “backdoor 251” progression, I explained it in detail for another student in the comment section here: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/over-the-rainbow-tutorial/
Looking at the previous bar we moved to the IV chord (Abmaj7) which is very common in jazz standards. We very often see a 251 progression into the IV chord, in this case the 251 progression in Ab Major in the previous bar.
It’s also common to turn the IV chord into a IV minor chord, as we see in this tune in the next bar, and the Db7 can be seen as the “b7 dominant chord” of Ebmaj7 , which is connected to the regular V7 chord in the key of Eb (Bb7) via the diminished connection that I explain in the comment section of the link above.
Basically, the Db7 is a substitute for Bb7, and we are approaching the Db7 with it’s ii-7 chord (Ab-7).
We see this movement in many tunes, to name a few:
Misty,
Tenderly,
Over The Rainbow,
There Will Never Be Another You
It is quite complicated to explain and to understand at first. Read my comment on the other lesson page and the diminished connection should make sense for you. Any dominant chord is related to 3 other dominant chords through the “diminished connection”.
Let me know if you have any further questions on this and I’m happy to provide more explanations.
Talk soon,
Hayden
erica says
Hi Hayden, I started to get very lost from the extension part. Not sure why the chords can suddenly be turned into 13, 11 etc. I am sure I have missed some important basics here? Which lessons should I go back to, before I can understand this part? Thanks so much!
Hayden says
Hey Erica,
Apologies for the late reply – I have been on vacation this week and I’m just catching up on questions and emails.
In jazz, we can add extensions to any chord. This doesn’t mean that we should use them on every chord, but as jazz musicians we have the creative freedom to add chord extensions to create richer sounding chords than basic 7th chords.
I recommend to first learn the “Misty” Novice arrangement found in this course: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/reading-lead-sheets-eb-major/ – here we stick to just 7th chords. Learn to play this song with basic chord voicings first. This is the foundation for learning any song.
Then recap the theory lessons in the chord extensions course: https://www.pianogroove.com/jazz-piano-lessons/extended-chords-voicings/
The theory can be confusing to start, and so I recommend to simply copy what I am playing to familiarise yourself with the sounds and shapes of extended chord voicings, even if you don’t full understand the theory. With time and practice the theory behind these chord voicing choices will make sense.
Set a goal to learn 10 or 20 jazz standards, and at that point you will be much more comfortable with reading lead sheets and understanding the options available.
Also start with our Novice courses which you can find here: https://www.pianogroove.com/syllabuses/lead-sheet-fundamentals/
Please let me know if I can help further and talk soon,
Hayden