@conkoumouris7119

very nice, thank you.

@kovalainenriku

Thanks for the occasional video in English! :) A great rundown of a great jazz original! Too often do many amazing countermelodies and harmonic details get overlooked, and there's certainly more than one video's worth of stuff to dive into in this particular tune.

@bluegiraffe7858

Excellent breakdown! Thank you

@cottontail75

Thank you! This lesson is very much appreciated, very well explained, and easy to follow. I love everything about this explanation and video! Cheers mate!

@NUFFSPEKDO

excellent lesson  its packed with info !!!!!!

@justicemarrz

You're really helping me learn standards with this content. I started playing jazz back in April and recently I've been asked to have a new tune down every week for the local jam session! This channel has helped me tremendously. Thank you for everything you do.

@felixhartley7749

At the session going 👀😜ðŸĪŠðŸ˜ðŸ˜Ž on the Dbmaj chord

@mer1red

I don't trust any version of the real book. It's a fake book, meaning rough sketches of the songs. In addition of missing the detail, the changes are "simplified" or altered to make improvisation easier. Even worse: some are notated by beginner students who have no idea about harmony. Ironically, afterwards some attempt an analysis of those songs often formulating the most horrible and far fetched explanations. Many times I went back to the original songbooks of the composers, being surprised by the clarity and logic of what they wrote. The Real book = waste of time and not good for your musical health. You can try transcriptions yourself, eg when the original is not available or because you like an interpretation, but especially live performances are not error proof or sometimes obscure. But transcribing is a good habit, for studying a solo or for lack of anything better.

@mikegeld1280

Please dont "hum" along with the tips ,seriously, its cringe af 👎