Easy Jazz Piano

  1. A good book of easy jazz pieces written for the adult beginner by Carl Strommen. Unlike some beginner books the pieces in this collection are simple, but musically interesting and hold your interest while progressing through the book to more difficult selections.
  2. Alfred's Easy Piano Songs - Standards & Jazz: 50 Classics from the Great American Songbook. By Alfred Music Aug 1, 2016. 4.4 out of 5 stars 47. Paperback $19.99 $ 19. Get it as soon as Wed, Mar 3. FREE Shipping on orders over $25 shipped by Amazon. More Buying Choices $14.65 (20 used & new offers).

Jazz Piano Lessons

Easy jazz piano pdf

Lots of easy piano music with guitar chords if you need them. Each song is several pages long, so turning pages is a bummer, but the notes and lyrics are large and easy to see. Good product for a good price.

Each of the below Jazz Piano Lessons introduces a particular concept found in Jazz. As well as explaining the underlying idea, I give examples of how the theory applies in practice. The lessons are further subdivided into modules covering specific aspects of Jazz. While they assume a minimal level of music theory and technical knowledge, they presume you know literally NOTHING about Jazz. As such, they start from a beginner level and gradually build up towards more advanced topics. These Jazz Piano Lessons cover everything you need to know to appreciate and play Jazz. By the end of these tutorials you should have a solid understanding of Jazz, and (with enough practice) be able to competently improvise and 'comp over any Jazz song.

Free easy jazz piano sheet music

Please also note that this website is a perennial work-in-progress. I will continue to add more Jazz Piano Lessons in the future to cover more topics and concepts. Enjoy!

Before diving into each Jazz concept in detail, I recommend watching the overview videos and downloading the PDF on the right to get a broad and contextualised understanding of the ideas we will soon be exploring.


The Basics
Overview
Scales
Modes
Chords & Intervals
Keys
Harmony
Swing vs Straight
Beginner Jazz Tips
Jazz for Beginners
Practicing Jazz
Sheet Music

Jazz Chords
Intro to Jazz
Extensions & Alterations
Available Tensions
Shell Chords
Chord Substitution
Passing Chords
Secondary Chords
Borrowed Chords
Suspended Chords
Phrygian Chords
Slash Chords
Harmonic Rhythm
Polychords
Modulation

Easy Jazz Piano Pdf


Jazz Scales
Chord-Scale System
Scales over Chords
Melodic Minor Modes
Bebop Scales
Wholetone Scale
Diminished Scale
Pentatonic Scale
Augmented Scale
Minor Scales
Selecting Scales
Tritone Sub. & Scales
Counting Scales
Synthetic Scales

Jazz Improvisation
Creating Tension
Playing Inside
Guide Tones
Embellishing the Melody
Avoid Notes
Dissonant Intervals
Passing Notes
Side-Slipping
Cycled Patterns
Symmetrical Scales
Cliches & Quoting
Displacing the Melody
Improvisation Tips
Chord Mapping
Improvisational Approaches
Sheets of Sound
Superimposition
Mistakes
Build an Improvisation
ii-V7-I Licks & Exercises
Analyse a Jazz Solo
Chordal Improvisation
Improvisation Exercises
Improvisation Stages
Rhythm & Articulation
Octave Displacement

Jazz Chord Voicings
Rootless Voicings
Monk Voicings
Powell Voicings
Three Note Voicings
Open Voicings
So What Chord
Barron Chord
Hancock Chord
Quartal Voicings
Upper Structures
Locked Hands
Advanced Locked Hands
Combining Chord Voicings
Chord Voicing Rules
How to Comp
Walking Bass-lines
Minimum Requirements
Jam Sessions
Tone Clusters
How to Play Jazz Piano
Comp for a Vocalist
When to Use Voicings
Stride Piano

Jazz Chord Progressions
Common Chord Progressions
Circle of Fifths
Minor II-V-I
Rhythm Changes
Coltrane Changes
Harmonic Functionality
Bird Changes
Line Cliches
Constant Structures
Polytonality
Lead Sheets
Contrafacts
Voice Leading
Harmonic Analysis
Contiguous ii-V's
Disguised Chords

Easy Jazz Piano Sheet Music


Jazz Reharmonization
Make a song 'Jazzy'
Reharmonization
Changing the meter
Tonal to Modal
Composition
ii-V Substitution
Gospel Reharmonization
Changing Genre

Modern Jazz Theory
Jazz Theory Overview
Tonal vs Modal
Lydian Chromatic Concept
Modal Jazz
Pandiatonicism
Free Jazz
Post-bop
Circular Songs
Suppressing the Chords
Time, No Changes
Pedal Point Harmony
Atonality
Musical Systems
Balance
Modern Jazz Summary

Jazz Genres
Early vs Modern Jazz Piano
Blues Piano
Swing Music
Bebop
Cool Jazz
Hard Bop
Afro-Cuban Jazz
Bossa Nova
Modal Jazz
Free Jazz
Post-bop
Fusion
Smooth Jazz
Gospel-Jazz
Jazz Blues
How to Listen to Jazz

Easy Jazz Piano Pdf

Upon finishing the above modules, you should be capable of analysing, appreciating, and (with a bit of practice) playing any Jazz song you come across. You should be able to (again, with a bit of practice) reharmonise and apply jazzy chord voicings to any song to create a smooth and professional performance (whether solo or group). You should (hopefully) be comfortable with the underlying Jazz Theory, know a few Jazz Standards, and be able to recognise each of the major Jazz Genres.

In a sense, this has so far been the easy part. The hard part is now up to you. Understanding Jazz is one thing, but to play it flawlessly takes hours, days, weeks, months, years and even decades of arduous, repetitive and monotonous practice (at a nice slow speed with a metronome!). So...over to you. Good Luck!

Easy Jazz Piano Tutorial Youtube

If you've found these lessons helpful and enjoyable, please consider donating. Oh, and if there's a particular concept that you would like explained that is not covered here, please feel free to ask.