Ebminor-emily remler.pdf

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Swing -6 i- -6 6- 7-8- -7 8—S-8- 7-8—7-6- -8-7 8- -6 6-8- 8 8 11—8-8- -8-^4- 1011 8 10 44- -40-8 4G 8- 6 3 /I 3 3- -8-44- 11 10 8- 16 -4Q-&- 11 10 8 11 10 -8-8- 11 8 8—3-4- 7-8- -&-«- g <n c 40- 776

Transcript of Ebminor-emily remler.pdf

Page 1: Ebminor-emily remler.pdf

Swing

-6 i--6 6- 7-8- -7 8—S-8- 7-8—7-6-

-8-7 8--6 6-8-

8 8 11—8-8--8-^4-

1011 8 10 44- -40-8 4G 8-6 3 /I 3 3- -8-44- 11 10 8-

16

-4Q-&-11 10 8

11 10 -8-8-11 8 8—3-4-

7-8-

-&-«-

g <n c40-7 7 6

Page 2: Ebminor-emily remler.pdf

4fe<*I:*T

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6 5 1

T~A~~ -6-3- -5 5 1 3 6 1 3

-4-4- -i—4-

g C 7 C /I C -§—§ 6—?—g_4- -§—8 6 — ? — 6 4 6

-8—8-

-3—6-•A—8-

-§—6-

6 5 3-A—4-

6 5

Taken from Emily Remler's Hotlicks Instruction Video "Advanced Jazz and Latin Improvisation".The excercises above refer to the section in which she defines 2 types of dominant seventh chord -the type 1 that does not resolve and the type 2 that resolves down 5 to 1. Both types can be playedover by a minor seventh scale, type 1 a fifth above and type 2 a semitone above because these minorsclaes contain all the colour tones of the associated dominant chords.The minor scale can sound dull and Emily developed scales and licks that are much more exciting. Bypracticing these it will help to create your own minor licks.

Transcribed by Trevor Teeky' White 2012That's my Eb minor