Learn the Language of Jazz

Interactive lessons on Coker's 18 "devices" — the essential vocabulary every jazz musician needs. Play. Listen. Understand. Then improvise.

Explore the Modules

Why this exists

In Elements of the Jazz Language, Jerry Coker identified 18 "devices" — patterns, phrasings, and techniques used by every great jazz improviser from Charlie Parker to John Coltrane. These aren't theory rules. They're the actual vocabulary of jazz speech.

Problem: Coker's book is textbook jazz education. Most students read the definitions, see transcribed solos, and... get stuck. Because understanding intellectually is different from hearing it, playing it, and internalizing it.

Jazz Interactive makes these devices playable. Each lesson is interactive — you hear the device in context, you can experiment with variations, you see how it connects to the harmony. You're not just reading about change-running or the 7-3 resolution. You're inside it.

"Jazz improvisation is not a mystery. It's a language. And like any language, it can be learned." — Jerry Coker

How this works

Each module follows a proven learning path: define the device, show how the masters use it, let you play with it interactively, and give you context from Coker's framework.

1. See

Visual explanation and definition of the device. What's the shape? Why does it matter?

2. Hear

Audio playback in context. Hear the device isolated, then in a harmonic progression. Your ear locks in.

3. Play

Interactive controls. Change the root, the tempo, the voicing. Experiment freely. Internalize the feel.

4. Apply

Real-world context from great solos. See exactly where Parker, Coltrane, or Hubbard used this device.

This is not a replacement for practicing scales or transcribing solos. It's a shortcut to understanding the vocabulary so you can practice and transcribe with real context.

Six Playable Devices

Element 01

Change-Running

Spelling out chord tones as a melodic phrase. The foundation of improvisation — orienting your ear and outlining harmony in real time.

Difficulty Beginner
Time 12 min
Element 02

Digital & Scalar Patterns

Short numbered cells (1-2-3-5) and continuous scalar runs. Coltrane built 35% of his improvisations on these patterns. Now you can too.

Difficulty Intermediate
Time 14 min
Element 03

7-3 Resolution

The ♭7 of the ii chord pulling down a half step to the 3 of the V chord. This single voice-leading move is the engine of bebop harmony.

Difficulty Intermediate
Time 10 min
Element 04

3-♭9

The most essential melodic movement in jazz. How the 3rd of a dominant chord resolves to its flatted 9th — a half-step climb that creates tension and forward motion.

Difficulty Beginner
Time 8 min
Element 05

Bebop Scale

The eight-note scale that keeps chord tones on the beat. Hear how one passing tone creates the forward motion and balance behind classic bebop lines.

Difficulty Intermediate
Status Live
Element 06

Bebop Lick

A signature rhythmic and melodic phrase that appears in solos from Parker to Coltrane. Master the shape and you'll hear it everywhere.

Difficulty Beginner
Time 10 min
Practice / 01

Looping Changes

Run any chord quality through the chromatic cycle or the cycle of fourths. Tempo slider, count-in, click, bass, and a 12-key preview rail. Practice your vocabulary in every key.

Difficulty All levels
Status Live

Help shape phase 2

We're currently testing these modules with jazz educators and advanced musicians. If you're interested in trying them out and sharing feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

Become a Beta Tester

Takes 20 minutes. No coding skills required. Just honest feedback on clarity, pedagogy, and teaching utility.