Bass day (1h 45m)

  • Chord tones + Walking bass lines
    • Harmonising Eb major scale with:
      • all inversions
      • 1st inversion in all permutations starting on 1
    • Applying inversions to All of Me (not literally though)
      • Whole song in 1st and 2nd
      • Whole song in 1st and 2nd in 1-3 and 1-5 permutations
      • Mixing different permutations
  • Chords
    • Recap all closed and open voicings of 7th chords
    • Recap triads in all inversions
    • Apply to All of Me chord chart

Next time focus: pick (choose a part to practice), permutations on 5 & 7, continue with chords

Piano day (1h 40m)

  • Jazz voicings
    • Dominant to major in 2 versions (learn, then with click)
    • Dominant to minor in 2 versions (recap)
  • Improvisation
    • Blues scale in all keys (RH), dominant chords in 7-3-5 voicing (LH)
      • Straight scale runs
      • Improv in 2 octaves

Next time focus: II — V — I — IVs in all keys, Mixo & Dorian scales, major blues scale, Melodic minor

Bass day (1h 30m)

  • Chord tones + Walking bass lines
    • Harmonising in permutations: Bb major, 12 permutations (6 on 1, 6 on 3)
    • Inversions (run all around the cycle)
    • 1st inversion in 6 permutations over Autumn Leaves
    • Mixing all inversions and permutations of root inversion over Autumn Leaves in 3 keys

Observarions

Permutations (especially permutations of inversions) are the best thing I’ve learned on bass so far. Thank you so much Mr. Mann, sir! :D

Piano day (2h) + Routine update

  • Jazz voicings
    • Dominant to minor #1 (+7 → m9 and back)
    • Dominant to minor #2 (7b9 → m7 and back)
    • Recap: dominant to major
    • Recao: minor to dominant
    • Recap: all 7ths around the cycle
  • Improvisation
    • Blues scale in all keys
    • Blues scale in RH, dominant chords in LH (around the cycle)
  • Modes
    • Harmonic minor mode 1
      • Harmonising with 7th chords: A through D#
      • Hm scales with both hands: A through D# around the circle of 5ths
  • Combining skills
    • Improvisation over Hm1 progression in F# (I — II — V — VI) with F# Hm + F# blues scale, using shell voicings in left hand

Observations

Just made a big review of my piano routine and goals, made it on paper and just wanted to put a quick digest of it here. So, I have three main areas of focus at the moment:

  1. Jazz voicings (shells, voice leading and transitions)
  2. Improvisation (blues & modal scales, common chord progressions, left hand patterns)
  3. Composition / modal focus (major modes, harmonic minor modes, melodic minor modes and their typical chord progressions)

I have a lot of exercises in each area that I partly borrow from some jazz books, partly take from my music school notes, partly invent myself. Luckily, they seem to overlap pretty good, and, in fact, there’s an area where all three come together. So improving in one makes me better at the other two. I discovered it recently when I decided to harmonise a random modal scale and instead of playing block 7th chords use shell voicings and watch out for voice leading to preserve minimum movement. It was extremely satisfying to discover that I could do it almost fluently, without really thinking about fingerings: my fingers sort of already knew where to go, as they got used to these movements during my endless cycle of 4ths runs. So that was great. I also realised that I am getting comfortable enough with scales to use them over chord progressions that I play with the left hand and mix them up to — basically, play jazz solos! Wow. So I decided to add this new section to my practice where I will intentionally combine all my skills that I develop in different areas of focus and improve my overall comping technique.

One thing I kind of excluded for now is technical exercises — for speed and finger independency and stuff — I used to do them a lot last year (Hanon exercises, arpeggios etc.), but it just doesn’t feel beneficial for my current goal right now (which is to get good at jazz comping). So I just leave the out for now. Also, I don’t learn songs or scores that much as I did before (it’s extremely time-consuming and could be very frustrating), but it’s also something that simply doesn’t fit well with my routine. I mean, I do understand why conservatory pianists practice 6 hours a day — you just can’t cover all the stuff you want to cover within 2 hours, let alone 1 hours. But to make up for that, I’m going to start learning songs from the Real Book — shell voicings with left hand, melody with the right. Should be enough for now! Okay that was it for the practice review, gotta go, till later!