FREE Jazz Guitar Masterclasses


I've spent years in NYC performing at The Blue Note, Zinc Bar, ShapeShifter Lab, and other famous jazz venues while hanging, playing, and studying with John Scofield, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Peter Bernstein, Brad Shepik, Stefon Harris, Mark Turner, Jean-Michel Pilc, Alan Ferber, and countless others.


We rarely - if ever - talked about scales, arpeggios, drop chords, or any traditional theory.


I hate that modern jazz education has become nothing but memorizing ideas that offer little more than taking up decades of our lives learning to intellectually approximate the beauty of great music. And I hate that in order to gain access to the real-deal education of being mentored by the living legends to learn about the spirit of the art form, musicians have to figure out a way to move to NYC. Something that very few jazz guitarists and lovers of our tradition are able to do.


I made these FREE masterclasses to show you exactly the types of things I studied with my mentors... without needing to give up your life, move to NYC, mortgage your kidney, and spend $100,000 in university tuition.

FREE COURSE #1

Improvisation


 Scales, modes, arpeggios, riffs, and noodling are sabotaging your jazz improv

✅ Looking at Charlie Parker, Monk, and standards... we'll discuss what to work on instead.

MASTERCLASS COMING SOON

FREE COURSE #2

Comping


 Drop chords and diatonic chord scale running is holding you back from comping freedom

✅ Looking at a real world example of masterful comping, we'll discuss what to work on instead.

MASTERCLASS COMING SOON

FREE COURSE #3

Adv Sounds


 Excessively complicated theory or academic bs is clogging up your creativity

✅ Looking at how piano players visualize the keyboard... we'll discuss what to work on instead.

MASTERCLASS COMING SOON

Do you want my help improving your jazz guitar playing? 

Yes, I Want To Study With Jordan  |  No Thanks, I'd Rather Do It Myself

Do you want my help improving your jazz guitar playing? 

Yes, I Want To Study With Jordan
No Thanks, I'd Rather Do It Myself