In this lesson, you’ll learn how to create fresh harmonic colors by redirecting II-V progressions to new destinations. Instead of resolving every D–7 → G7 to Cmaj7, try substituting F–7 → Bb7 → Cmaj7 or even Ab–7 → Db7 → Cmaj7. Re-targeting opens up new melodic pathways and adds sophistication to your playing.
Up Next in Jazz Breaks with Barry
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Triad Pairs - Jazz Break
Triad Pairs
This lesson explores improvising with triads instead of traditional linear lines. By pairing two triads—like F and G major over a D–7 chord—you’ll discover fresh intervallic textures and melodic shapes that break you out of scalar playing and add a modern edge to your solos. -
The Wes Montgomery Tritone Substituti...
In this lesson, you’ll learn how to apply Wes Montgomery’s approach to tritone substitutions by replacing a standard II-V-I with one a tritone away. For example, instead of D–7 → G7 → Cmaj7, try Ab–7 → Db7 → Cmaj7. This simple shift adds rich altered tones and creates the sophisticated harmonic c...
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Developing Vocabulary - Jazz Break
This lesson shows you how to build your improvisational language by studying and reworking phrases from classic bebop heads. You’ll learn how to extract, adapt, and connect these melodic ideas to develop authentic bebop vocabulary that naturally flows in your solos.
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