How to Play Jazz Guitar : Walking Bass Chord Comping in Jazz Guitar

Mon, Jan 18, 2010

Guitar Lessons Videos

GuitarJamz.Com 10m Free Lessons

Learn how to play walking bass chord comping in jazz guitar from a recording artist in thisfree music lesson video. Expert: Dustin Plumb Contact: www.dustinplumb.net Bio: Dustin Plumb is a recording artist, who has a Bachelors’ in Music from the University of Oregon. He resides in Las Vegas where he runs a sound design company called DP creative. Filmmaker: Dustin Plumb

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25 Responses to “How to Play Jazz Guitar : Walking Bass Chord Comping in Jazz Guitar”

  1. Microshrimp Says:

    What’s a good guitar to buy that will produce a nice warm tone like this? (Any under $500?) Or does the amp have a lot to do with it? What about strings?

  2. disasterwave Says:

    Epiphone WildKat Ltd the guitar is well 499.99 which is still 500 but it great for this sorta tone and as for an amp a marshal 10 wat amp is good for practice its 100$ or a fender frontman 25 wat for 100$ strings i use regular slinky ernie ball strings cause they feel good on my fingers and theyre easy to play i hope i helped

  3. HalfBillion Says:

    get a taylor 114 or a martin ooox1, they are a little more than 500$ but well worth it. trust me

  4. ALT980 Says:

    I second that.

  5. SamCurran41 Says:

    jazz even makes me sexy

  6. JosephIbrahim88 Says:

    amp, guitar, strings, pick, fingers, eq on the amp All of these determine tone.

  7. JosephIbrahim88 Says:

    aren’t those e9 and d9, not e7 and d7?

  8. GerMaj7th Says:

    Cracking lesson! Short, to-the-point and easy to understand- given me a lot of ideas to work on there

  9. eatthepoor000 Says:

    esurance sucks dick.

  10. BluesRenegade Says:

    No, they are 7th chords; they can be played as either 3 or 4-note chords. The 3-note form of those E7 and D7 chords are played on the A, D, and G strings. The 4-note form adds the 5th tone of the scale on the high E-string with the pinky finger. NOTE: The B string is muted. Try alternating between the 9th and the 7th and you’ll hear the difference. Hope that helps!

  11. otherrandomhero Says:

    I’ve been impressed with some of the mid-range ibanez models, mainly the semi-hollow ones. They might be a tad out of your price range, but the fretwork and build quality are great and the warm tone is there. The amp doesn’t matter as much, just make sure the bass is high and the treble low on the EQ. Get some reverb on and put the mids and presence wherever you feel necessary for however much punch you want in your tone.

  12. LGD3 Says:

    In jazz people just say 7th, minor 7th or major 7th (or m7b5 etc.). The listener understands that you can add extra chord tones to your taste if you want. (You might say Am7, but play Am11 for example).

  13. murlocforlunch Says:

    F*** you!

  14. bougnat44 Says:

    Of course it’s D7/9 and C7/9. The D7 is DF#AC and the chord plays in this lesson is DEAC. The same thing for the C.

  15. adriano1078 Says:

    my mum said your good

  16. BonFire110 Says:

    This is awful, man! THX a lot!!!

  17. elcangrejoandre Says:

    Black and white is the same.
    The music is one.
    One god.

  18. michaeljjeffrey Says:

    yeah, that makes no sense.

  19. Guitarmajster Says:

    actually this video helped me a bit :)

  20. MrSteakBakes Says:

    Epiphone Casino , lovely guitar.

  21. jazzyfender Says:

    what chord voicings are you using in this video?

  22. Marxhuttof Says:

    aahi really do need a new boy toy hihi

  23. MalNichtEgal Says:

    mache das Beruflich ?

  24. TidiSnail Says:

    @MrSteakBakes Although the casino is lovely, the guitar is an Epiphone Broadway.

  25. MazzazzK Says:

    Whaaa?

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