Our plans with the DLP Jazz Series are to help you learn the language of music.  Music, like all languages, has an alphabet, a grammar and set structures.  You need to have an understanding of these concepts to communicate and create ideas in this language.  This sounds like a daunting take, but it's not really and we're looking forward to helping you learn to improvise.

But then, the next step is.... What to do once you have all of this knowledge. 
How do I create music that communicates ideas, that reaches listeners, that makes other musicians want to play with me?

Listen

Listening to what other people in your group play and reacting to that are a key component of being a musician in all styles.  Be a part of the ensemble, accept and play off of each others ideas.  This is when magic happens on a bandstand.

Here's a great TED talk on that topic by Stefon Harris, titled, "There Are No Mistakes On The Bandstand"


http://www.ted.com/talks/stefon_harris_there_are_no_mistakes_on_the_bandstand.html 
 
 
The DLP Jazz Series will be released in early 2012. Once in a while when we're describing the Kore Series or Jazz Series to a potential new user they'll ask, "Will I be learning REAL songs in here or just exercises?".  The answer is, we believe, that these are real songs BUT that they are also songs that function as exercises to review ONLY the concepts you have learned up to that point.  They are songs built specifically for where you are in your musical learning and for where you are in your technical development on your instrument at this time.

So, from a concert I did this past Monday (12/12/11) are 2 songs from the upcoming DLP Jazz Series.  These feature; myself on Keyboards, Jennifer Escue (from the DLP Staff ) on Vocals, Jeff Plant on Bass, Larry White on Steel Guitar and Lamont Taylor on Drums.