🎹 Advanced Lesson 1: Technique Meets Interpretation
Theme: “Precision, Personality, and Perspective”
Goals:
Refine technique through expressive and stylistic control
Analyze and interpret advanced harmonic progressions
Begin integrating improvisation and written music fluently
Explore tone, articulation, and voicing at a high level
1. Technical Warm-Up (15 min)
Focus: Control, Clarity, and Tone
Scales in 3 and 4 octaves: C, G, D, A major and minor (harmonic & melodic)
Vary articulations (legato, staccato, slurred groups of 4)
Practice with dynamic shaping
Arpeggios in hands-together octaves (root, 1st, 2nd inversion)
Hanon or Czerny variation: with rhythmic and dynamic variation
2. Repertoire Development (20 min)
Choose one piece from each style:
Classical:
Example: Chopin Prelude, Debussy Arabesque, or a movement from a sonata
Focus: tone color, pedal control, phrase shaping
Analyze form, thematic development, and key modulations
Jazz:
Example: “Autumn Leaves,” “Blue in Green,” or a bebop head (e.g., “Donna Lee”)
Focus: voice leading in chords, phrase contour, swing feel vs rubato
3. Harmonic Study & Improvisation (20 min)
Goal: Fluid improvisation and harmonic awareness
Analyze ii–V–I progressions in different keys
Discuss upper extensions (9ths, 13ths), altered dominants
Practice improvising over:
ii–V–I in 3 keys
One full chorus of a standard
Add left-hand shell voicings while RH solos
Experiment with modal vs tonal improvisation (Dorian vs major)
4. Ear Training & Transcription (10–15 min)
Sing and play chord progressions (recognize by ear)
Begin transcribing a jazz solo or a classical motif
Dictation: short melodic/rhythmic fragments by ear
Encourage students to bring audio clips for analysis
5. Wrap-Up & Practice Planning (5 min)
Focus Areas:
Targeted technique (articulation or tempo goal)
Phrase-by-phrase repertoire refinement
Improvisation: new concept or solo segment
Listening assignment: compare two recordings of the same piece (one classical, one jazz)
🎹 Lesson 11: Advanced Improvisation – Motivic Development & Thematic Variation
Theme: “Building Stories from Small Ideas”
Focus:
Developing improvisations from small motifs
Techniques: sequence, inversion, augmentation, diminution
Applying motivic development to jazz and classical phrases
Activities:
Extract a motif from a classical or jazz piece
Improvise variations using rhythmic and melodic transformations
Compose a short improvisational piece based on a motif
Analyze how famous soloists develop motifs in their solos
🎹 Lesson 12: Extended Techniques & Tone Colors
Theme: “Expanding Your Sonic Palette”
Focus:
Using pedaling creatively (half pedal, flutter, syncopated pedaling)
Touch and articulation variations to create color
Inside-the-piano effects (muting strings, sympathetic resonance)
Activities:
Experiment with different pedaling on a lyrical piece
Practice dynamic shading with varied touch and articulation
Explore inside-the-piano effects in an improvisation or composition
Record and evaluate tone color choices
🎹 Lesson 13: Advanced Jazz Harmony & Reharmonization
Theme: “Transforming the Tune”
Focus:
Substitutions (tritone, diminished, modal interchange)
Altered chords and chromatic approaches
Reharmonizing standards with personal voice
Activities:
Analyze reharmonizations by great jazz pianists
Practice reharmonizing a simple tune (e.g., “Autumn Leaves”)
Improvise over substituted changes
Compose a reharmonized version of a standard
🎹 Lesson 14: Classical Modernism & Impressionism
Theme: “Beyond Tonality”
Focus:
Study impressionistic harmony (Debussy, Ravel)
Explore modal, whole tone, and synthetic scales
Analyze modern harmonic language and texture
Activities:
Play and analyze impressionist excerpts
Compose a short piece using impressionistic techniques
Improvise using whole-tone or modal scales
Compare impressionist and jazz approaches to harmony
🎹 Lesson 15: Composition & Arrangement
Theme: “Your Musical Voice”
Focus:
Structure and thematic development in composition
Arranging jazz tunes for solo piano or small ensembles
Combining jazz and classical elements creatively
Activities:
Compose an original piece or arrangement
Present and perform compositions for feedback
Analyze scores of jazz-classical crossover works
Develop a practice plan for integrating composition into daily work
🎹 Lesson 16+: Masterclass & Performance
Theme: “Confidence and Communication”
Focus:
Preparing for public performance and recordings
Stage presence, set programming, and audience connection
Masterclass format: peer feedback and self-evaluation
Activities:
Perform pieces and improvisations in lesson or recorded sessions
Critique and refine performance habits
Plan a recital or recording project
Explore live or virtual collaboration opportunities
🎹 Lesson 4: Advanced Voicings & Texture
Theme: "Voicing the Story"
Focus:
Drop 2 voicings, close vs. open voicing
Classical texture: polyphony, voicing inner lines
Activities:
Practice Drop 2 chords on ii–V–I in 3 keys
Classical: Analyze Bach or Brahms excerpt – bring out middle voice
Jazz: Comp with varied textures (rootless LH, RH clusters, two-hand voicing)
Improvise using just chord tones and upper extensions
🎹 Lesson 5: Modal & Tonal Contrast
Theme: "Exploring Color Through Modes"
Focus:
Modes: Dorian, Mixolydian, Lydian
Classical modality (Debussy, early music influence)
Activities:
Build and play modes from a single root
Improvise over modal vamp (e.g., D Dorian, C Lydian)
Classical: Play and analyze modal phrases in Debussy or Bartók
Compose a short modal improvisation or motif
🎹 Lesson 6: Contrapuntal Thinking & Independence
Theme: "Two Hands, Two Minds"
Focus:
Develop LH/RH independence for contrapuntal clarity
Bach, fugue excerpts, jazz counterlines
Activities:
Practice simple 2-part inventions or original two-voice exercises
Jazz: Add counterlines under melody (Wynton Kelly-style)
Create your own two-voice groove or line
Transcribe 4 bars of a contrapuntal passage from jazz or classical source
🎹 Lesson 7: Advanced Form – AABA, Sonata, Through-Composed
Theme: "Architecture of Sound"
Focus:
Analyze and navigate complex forms
Internalizing form through listening and performance
Activities:
Break down a jazz standard (AABA) and classical piece (Sonata form or binary)
Map improvisation over each section with contrast and development
Classical: Play and mark formal cadences and themes
Jazz: Solo with clear contrast in each section (melodic, rhythmic, dynamic)
🎹 Lesson 8: Polyrhythm & Metric Modulation
Theme: "Rhythmic Play"
Focus:
Cross-rhythms (3 over 4, 5 over 4)
Classical: metric ambiguity in Chopin, Ravel
Jazz: modern rhythmic improvisation (e.g., Mehldau, Tyner)
Activities:
Polyrhythm exercises (hands in different meters)
RH triplets over LH eighths – slow and controlled
Classical: Ravel rhythmic displacement
Jazz: improvise with rhythmic motifs that shift time feel
🎹 Lesson 9: Interpretation vs. Innovation
Theme: "Where Tradition Meets Voice"
Focus:
Explore interpretation in classical performance
Jazz: innovate within a tune, reharmonize, change time feel
Activities:
Play one classical piece traditionally, then interpretively
Jazz: reharmonize a standard or shift to 3/4 or Latin groove
Compare two recordings of the same piece (rubato, voicing, etc.)
Compose a short variation on a known piece (classical or jazz)
🎹 Lesson 10: Final Project & Performance Prep
Theme: "Integration & Personal Voice"
Focus:
Performance readiness
Showcase of style, technique, and creativity
Activities:
Final polish of one jazz and one classical piece
2-chorus improvisation over complex changes
Original composition or arrangement (can combine styles)
Optional recording for feedback and review
🎹 Advanced Lesson 2: Chord Color & Interpretation
Theme: “Harmony as Expression”
Duration:
Goals:
Refine use of extended chords and voicings
Deepen harmonic analysis in both classical and jazz works
Improve interpretive decisions based on harmony and form
Develop left-hand control in both solo and accompaniment settings
1. Technique Warm-Up (10–15 min)
Arpeggios with extended chord tones (maj7, min9, dom13)
Practice scales in 6ths or 10ths (e.g., C major, A melodic minor)
Articulation focus: staccato in one hand, legato in the other
2. Repertoire Refinement (15–20 min)
Classical:
Focus: harmonic tension and release, e.g., Chopin Nocturne, Beethoven Sonata movement
Practice shaping a phrase by following chord direction (dominant → tonic)
Jazz:
Analyze voicings in a tune like “Misty” or “My Funny Valentine”
Explore rootless LH voicings (guide tones and tensions)
3. Harmony & Voicing Lab (15 min)
Build lush voicings with 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths
Apply to a tune’s progression (e.g., "Autumn Leaves" or “Body and Soul”)
Practice comping with varied textures (block vs. broken chords)
4. Improvisation (15–20 min)
Improvise over ii–V–I in multiple keys
Use upper chord extensions purposefully
Challenge: build solo that grows dynamically and harmonically
5. Wrap-Up & Assignment (5 min)
Transcribe 4–8 bars of a favorite pianist’s voicing/phrase
Record and critique your voicing choices over a ballad
Practice 3 tunes: 1 classical, 1 jazz, 1 for sight reading
🎹 Advanced Lesson 3: Rhythm, Pulse & Independence
Theme: “Time Feels and Phrasing Across Styles”
Duration: 60–75 minutes
Goals:
Develop rhythmic precision and flexibility
Understand polyrhythms and rubato in interpretation
Improve coordination between hands for rhythmic independence
Explore groove and phrasing in solo and group contexts
1. Technical Warm-Up (15 min)
Scales in polyrhythm (RH triplets, LH duplets)
Hanon/Czerny with rhythmic displacements
Left-hand rhythmic ostinato while RH plays melodic lines
2. Classical Focus: Rubato and Flexibility (15 min)
Piece with expressive tempo control (e.g., Chopin, Ravel, Debussy)
Practice controlled rubato: stretch and return
Shape a phrase without losing pulse integrity
3. Jazz Focus: Swing & Groove Depth (15 min)
Explore jazz phrasing behind/on/ahead of the beat
Analyze a solo that plays with rhythmic displacement (e.g., Herbie Hancock, Oscar Peterson)
Comp with subtle rhythmic variation (avoid mechanical comping)
4. Rhythmic Improvisation (20 min)
Start solo with rhythm only, then add pitch
Restrict pitch set (e.g., C blues scale) and vary only the rhythm
Advanced challenge: improvise using rhythmic motifs over multiple chord changes
5. Wrap-Up & Practice Challenge (5 min)
Practice shifting time feels: straight → swing → Latin
Assignment: create a 4-bar phrase that contrasts rhythmically with the LH
Listening: study rhythmic feel differences in Bill Evans vs McCoy Tyner