Evgeny Chernonog

Get Down and Boogie - Tutorial for jazz piano students

Hello jazz lovers!

I am Evgeny Chernonog, jazz pianist and instructor. Since 1998 I have been working as a piano teacher in Anchorage, Alaska. In the same year I wrote a dozen blues and boogie-woogie pieces as tutorial material for my jazz piano class. Over the years I have realized that the tunes have been working well for several generations of my students and are worth sharing. Now I would like to introduce the first six boogie-woogie pieces. The rest of the album is coming soon.

As a jazz pianist, I always enjoy playing boogie-woogie at my solo performances. Though some might consider the boogie-woogie style a bit old-fashioned or out-of-date, I have found that it always receives an enthusiastic reception – people love the blues done boogie-woogie!
As a piano teacher, I know that this style is an excellent way to both teach the blues form and help foster the skills needed for improvisational jazz styles.
The selected pieces were written as traditional 12-bar blues structures with standard boogie-woogie patterns in the left hand and easy-playing variations in the right hand.  In the variations the student will learn and practice dominant seventh chords in different inversions.  These compositions also make use of the blues scale with its typical musical phrases that are so much a part of American popular music.  These right hand patterns repeat quite often in different keys so that the student will become confident using these phrases as improvising material when playing in the blues/jazz style.
When I was 16, my boogie-woogie version of the “Amphibian Man Rock” (from the movie of the same name), was a rockin’ success with my classmates, and I was hooked on the boogie-woogie.  I am hoping that these pieces will help the young student start a similar love for this distinctive piano style.

You can find more about me here:
www.AlaskanJazzMammoth.com

 

Инструменты

0:00
00:00