Apps, Mobile & SMS

Learn Jazz Improvisation With Jazz Apps Mobile’s iImprov Series


IImprovBy Harry Decimo of Evolver.fm.

Trolling through the app stores, a musician sees plenty of options for learning new tricks, and all sort of tuners and other utilities. But truly useful musicians’ tools designed for players who know what they are doing are decidedly rarer. Basic guides to music theory and the like are common enough, but we haven’t seen many apps set their sights higher.

However, we found some, in the form of Jazz Apps Mobile’s iImprov series, which provide a refreshing example of what mobile technology can provide for both beginning and expert musicians.

As someone who has dabbled in jazz, improvisation, and the like, the mere existence of these apps is exciting, because jazz still deserves some of the spotlight it enjoyed in the past.

That being said, the actual usefulness of these apps required scrutiny — especially because each app in the series costs $4 with the exception of the $1 Chord/Scale Compendium, a comprehensive guide for beginning musicians looking to play right off the bat. You’ll need at least some music-reading ability, but the app provides audio of both a chord and scale, along with written notation, so you could actually use it to learn to read music, in a sense. An easy-to-use scrollbar lets you choose the key in which you wish to improvise.

The others, while pricier, are decidedly more advanced in their knowledge requirements. Though they are essentially a guide, they expect that the reader has some basic understanding of music notation and perhaps even theory in order to comprehend the material.

The “Fundamentals” volume is the best place to start, provided you are prepared to do some reading. Once you get through that, this app and the others provide all the necessary information for playing not only basic solos, but for more advanced improvisation over complex charts.

Essentially, these are iOS ports of a standard jazz instruction manual, and those typically cost much more, and you can’t put them in your pocket. So even though these apps might seem expensive, they make up for their relative expense with genuine usefulness. If you know what you’re doing, to an extent, but want to extend your jazz-improvisational abilities, I have verified that these will in fact do the trick.

(Ed. note: In case anyone has wondered whether you can add an “i” prefix to a word that already begins with “I,” the answer is… sort of.)


Share on:

1 Comment

  1. Of course jazz “deserves the spotlight it had in the past” …. Come on, it’s the most complex form of popular music in existence. Most other music is basic and rudimentary in comparison. Any musician who spends time tackling jazz automatically becomes a better musician for it.

Comments are closed.