Am6 Arpeggio and Rhythmic Displacement

Am6 Arpeggio and Rhythmic Displacement

This week I’ve faced my fear of speaking into a camera for the good of your jazz-funk education, enjoy!  
 The first half of this quick lesson teaches you an Am6 arpeggio, which gives you a bright, jazzy sound over a minor vamp or II chord in a progression:  
 I recorded the video with only half and idea of what i was going to do, and in demonstrating it, mixed up the arpeggio by starting half way up which sounded pleasant, so I’ve tabbed that out for you as well:  
Next comes the rhythmic displacement. An impressive sounding phrase, but it’s fairly straightforward; we’re just splitting up a ‘straight’ rhythm by adding rests between groups of notes. In this case we’re putting a 16th note rest between groups of 4:
Finally, I demonstrated how you can apply the displaced 16th note rhythm to a more linear blues scale run. The second one was the best, so here’s the tab for that:
Hope you’ve gleaned something from this lesson, explore the arpeggio and the rhythmic concept on your own, and I’ll do a follow up lesson looking a little deeper soon. Cheers! Sean.
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