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Learning Jazz Violin

124 members • Free

2 contributions to Learning Jazz Violin
One thing you would like to improve on?
Hi all, Give me one thing you would like to get better with in terms of your jazz playing. Mine is my consistency across different keys. I feel like I play differently (sometimes worse) in certain keys and would like to transfer what I play in say C major, to Ab and Db. Let me know in the comments!
1 like • 22d
@Alison Foyle IT may be helpfull to first play it, play it again and than onother time ...... till you begin to hear it in your head. As you than play it, you don't have to think anymore and you will place your fingers automaticly. As I do so, you will be able to play it as you want to, even change a little every time, but still be in the song. As i practiced so, I became able to play out of my feeling and heart. I don't say it will be easy at first, but I do say your abillity to play and improvise can become a lot easyer and better. So give it a try! I hope this will be helpfull for you. Greatings, Ivar
Using your “Classical” Mindset
Something that @Nicola Milne mentioned on one of my posts got me thinking about coming from a classical background… If you’ve come from classical music to jazz, it might sometimes feel like you are in a different world with jazz, and whilst that’s sort of true, here is how you can use that background to your advantage. A lot of new jazz violinists come from classical. People often feel like they have to forget or undo that background, but I don’t think it’s a hindrance at all. Actually I think it can actually be a massive advantage, and one that many fiddlers and folk players might even envy. Classical practise takes a very focused mind when it comes to detail and perfection. Use that. Don’t throw it away. I’ll chat about the bigger differences in other posts, but for now I want to give you a tangible way to actually use your classical mindset in jazz. Say you are working on a transcription. Treat it like a piece of music you had to learn for a performance to be played without the page, like a concerto you were getting ready to perform or audition with. Learn it in full and don’t move on until you have it right. Intonation, execution, feel and expression. One of the ways you can do this is intense listening and playing along with the recording of the solo. This isn’t quite how we do it in classical music, but keep that classical mindset and focus on detail and perfection. It’s not a hindrance. It’s a strength, if you direct it properly. Do you think your classical background gets in the way, or does it help?
0 likes • Nov 3
My experience with a classical background: I firrst had a good classical way of learning to play the violin. Later I also had lessons and played with a gipsy violinist. I remember the first lesson by the gipsy: I was totaly grounded as he sayd to me to play along ....... Oh how do I have to do that without the musicpaper I thought! Yeah I had to let go my classical building and had to play out of my head heart and feeling. For me this was very difficult to do at first. Years later the gipsy- violinist told me that he would not have wanted to teach me if I not allready could have played that good. Now he could directly learn me better to learn play with feeling and out of my heart. and to improvise within the music. So you see a classical foundation will be very good for be able to play good violin...... But than it can be a little difficult to step out of that "classical-box" , to cross over the classical-boundaryand open up for other ways of playing like Jazz, gipsy etc. Use all and it will enrich your playing.... It has done that for me! Greetings, Ivar
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Ivar Vogelezang
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@ivar-vogelezang-6554
Hello everyone in here!

Active 19h ago
Joined Oct 30, 2025