Bebop vocabulary, modal theory, and ensemble instinct — taught by working musicians who still gig on weekends. For adult players who know exactly what gap they need to close.
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Woodshed teaches bebop vocabulary, modal theory, and ensemble instinct to adult players at every level — by working musicians who still gig on weekends.
The approach
Most jazz education teaches theory in the abstract. We teach the way the music actually gets learned — by playing it, hearing it, and playing it again until the language is yours.
"The woodshed is where you go when nobody's watching. When the room is empty and you can run the same ii-V-I for an hour because the acoustics are perfect and the music doesn't care about your ego."
Every concept gets attached to a sound before it gets attached to a name. You hear the tritone substitution land. Then we explain why.
Bird didn't invent his lines from nothing. He learned the language until it became instinct. We teach the vocabulary so that freedom has somewhere to go.
Everything builds toward a moment when you're on stage and the changes are moving. We rehearse that moment from week one.
No instructor here has retired into teaching. Current gigs mean current vocabulary. The idiom stays alive.
The faculty
No one here retired into teaching. Every instructor has a current gig. That matters — it means the vocabulary they teach is alive, not archived.

Saxophone · Harmony
Plays Friday nights at the Blue Room. Spent three years in New York studying with post-bop veterans before moving back to teach. Believes theory only makes sense when it's attached to a sound you already love.
Current gig: The Raymond Okafor Quartet — touring regionally
Bebop vocabulary, Coltrane changes, altissimo technique

Piano · Theory
Conservatory-trained, self-re-educated in the jazz idiom over ten years of gigging. Her harmonic analysis lessons have a reputation for making players say "I've been hearing that wrong my whole life."
Current gig: House pianist, Thursday sessions at The Anchor
Voicings, modal harmony, reharmonization

Bass · Ensemble
Twenty years on the bandstand. Teaches the thing most schools skip: how to listen on a gig. His ensemble classes are recorded so students can hear themselves from the outside.
Current gig: First-call bassist for three working groups in the region
Walking bass, ensemble dynamics, rhythm section concepts

Live class · Ensemble session
"Is that a tritone sub or a backdoor dominant?"
— an actual conversation from last Thursday's session
No lesson required
A PDF built around your specific gap. Where to start, what to work on first, and what to ignore for now. Choose a door above to personalize it.
Name, instrument, email. That's it. We'll match you to the right instructor and have your first lesson ready before the week is out.
"The woodshed is where you become the player you hear in your head."