
Find Jazz Piano Lessons with Excellent Teachers
Discover experienced, passionate Jazz Piano teachers to help you reach your next level.
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Yamada Ryo

Gary Johnston

Keith Phillips

Jim Funnell
Jim is one of the best music teachers I've had and I've learned classical piano, indian classical, and jazz more recently. He can both simplify an exercise to drill in a key skill while hinting at the next level up to add color to the tune by way of voicings, syncopation, and improv. I've been taking lessons from him for several months now and I plan to continue!
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What is the best method for learning Jazz Piano ?
We're biased, of course, but at Lessonface we believe the best way to learn Jazz Piano is through one-on-one lessons. Personalized instruction means your teacher can tailor every lesson to your goals, learning style, and skill level. Online group classes can also be a great way to make learning fun and social. Learning Jazz Piano online makes it easy to stay consistent, which is essential to steady progress.
There are plenty of apps and YouTube videos out there to help with learning Jazz Piano, but most teachers agree that those resources work best as supplements to, not replacements for, one-on-one instruction. A skilled Jazz Piano teacher can identify bad habits before they become ingrained, help you focus on what matters most, and solve problems as soon as they arise, often saving you months of frustration and wasted practice time. The bottom line? A real teacher accelerates your progress and keeps you on the right path from day one.
How do online Jazz Piano lessons work?
How do I find the best teacher for me for Jazz Piano lessons?
With over 100 qualified Jazz Piano teachers who have together earned an average of 4.98 out of 5 stars over 172 lesson reviews by verified students, you can be sure to find a great instructor at Lessonface.
Lessonface offers free tools to help you find the ideal tutor for you or your family:
- Use the open filtering system
- Use our matching service to describe your background, scheduling preferences, and any particular goals, and qualified Jazz Piano teachers will respond.
You can view teachers' bios, accolades, rates, send them a message and book lessons from their profiles.
Many teachers offer a free trial, and you can book lessons one at a time until you decide you prefer to book a bundle or subscribe, so don't hesitate to try. Teachers may also offer group classes, self-paced courses, and downloadable content, so there are more ways to get started while you're still getting acquainted with the community.
How much do Jazz Piano lessons cost?
How does payment work for Jazz Piano lessons?
Do I need to know how to play piano before I start learning jazz piano?
No prior piano experience is required to start learning jazz piano. Plenty of people begin their entire piano journey with jazz as their goal, and a good jazz piano teacher can absolutely start you from scratch.
That said, it's worth knowing what "starting from scratch" means in practice. In your early lessons, you'll be building foundational skills alongside jazz-specific ones — learning how the keyboard is laid out, developing basic finger independence, and getting comfortable with simple chord shapes, all while your teacher introduces you to the sounds and concepts that make jazz distinctive. It takes a little longer to get to the fun parts this way, but having a clear musical goal from day one actually accelerates progress and keeps you motivated.
If you do have some piano background — even just a year or two of classical lessons as a child — you'll find that foundation genuinely useful. Basic finger independence, familiarity with the keyboard, and any music reading ability you have will all give you a head start.
The most important thing isn't where you're starting from — it's finding a teacher who is comfortable working with beginners and can introduce jazz concepts in a way that feels accessible and exciting from the very first lesson. Some jazz piano teachers specialize in adult beginners specifically, and working with the right teacher makes an enormous difference.
Do I need to learn to read music to play jazz piano? What about music theory?
You don't need to read sheet music to play jazz piano, and many great jazz pianists have had limited or no sheet music reading ability. Jazz is fundamentally an aural tradition — it's learned largely by listening, imitating, and internalizing. Lead sheets, which show just the melody and chord symbols, are the most common written format in jazz, and learning to read those is much simpler than reading full classical notation. A good jazz teacher will help you develop the level of reading that serves your goals.
Music theory is a different story. Theory is genuinely central to jazz in a way that it isn't for many other styles. Understanding chord construction, chord progressions, and scales gives you the vocabulary to improvise, communicate with other musicians, and make sense of what you're hearing. You don't need to master theory before you start — in fact, the best approach is learning theory in direct connection with music you're actually playing. But expect theory to be a consistent thread running through your jazz piano education.
The good news is that jazz theory, while deep, is also logical and rewarding to learn. Most students find that the more theory they absorb, the more the music opens up and makes sense — and the more fun it becomes to play.
What's the difference between learning classical piano and jazz piano? If I already play classical, is it easy to transition to jazz?
Classical and jazz piano share the same instrument and some foundational techniques, but they are in many ways distinct disciplines that require different skills and different ways of thinking about music.
Classical piano training emphasizes reading notation accurately, reproducing a composer's written intentions with precision, and developing technical facility through structured exercises and repertoire. Jazz piano, by contrast, emphasizes improvisation, chord-based thinking, and developing your own voice within a tradition. Where classical training asks you to faithfully interpret someone else's music, jazz training asks you to create in real time.
If you already play classical piano, you bring real advantages to jazz. Finger independence, technical facility, music reading ability, and an understanding of harmony will all serve you well. Many jazz concepts will feel familiar in theory, even if applying them in a jazz context takes adjustment.
The transition does require rewiring some habits, though. Classical pianists often find that the hardest part of learning jazz isn't the theory or the technique — it's loosening up. Swing rhythm, blues feeling, and improvisational thinking don't come naturally to players trained to follow written notes precisely. Expect an adjustment period, and expect it to be genuinely fun once things start to click.
A teacher who understands both traditions and has experience working with classical crossover students will make the transition much smoother.
What are the different styles of jazz piano?
Jazz piano has a rich and varied history, and the different styles that have emerged over the past century are distinct enough that some players specialize in just one or two their entire careers.
Stride piano is one of the earliest jazz piano styles, developed in the 1920s. It features a distinctive left hand pattern that alternates between a low bass note and a mid-range chord, creating a bouncy, propulsive feel. Fats Waller and James P. Johnson are the names most associated with the style.
Bebop piano emerged in the 1940s and brought a new level of harmonic and rhythmic complexity to jazz. The left hand became more sparse and unpredictable, while the right hand played rapid, intricate melodic lines. Bud Powell is considered the defining bebop pianist.
Cool jazz and modal jazz, associated with players like Bill Evans and Herbie Hancock, brought a more spacious, impressionistic approach. Chords became more colorful and complex, and the music often breathed more openly than bebop.
Hard bop brought blues and gospel influences back into jazz piano, with players like Horace Silver and Bobby Timmons developing a grittier, more soulful approach.
Later developments include jazz fusion, which incorporated electric piano and synthesizers, and contemporary jazz piano, which draws freely from all of these traditions and beyond.
Most jazz piano teachers will introduce students to several of these styles, helping them develop a broad foundation before finding their own voice.
How do I develop a jazz feel and get good at swing rhythm?
Swing rhythm is one of those things that's easier to absorb than to explain. At its core, swing involves a particular way of treating rhythm — notes that are nominally equal in length are played unevenly, with a lilt and bounce that gives jazz its characteristic forward momentum. But describing it in words only gets you so far. The most important thing you can do to develop a jazz feel is listen — a lot, and actively.
Listening is not a passive activity in jazz education. When you listen with intention — paying attention to how a pianist comps behind a soloist, how they use space, how their left hand interacts with their right — you are absorbing a musical language that no amount of theoretical explanation can fully convey. This is how jazz has always been transmitted, and it remains the most direct path to sounding like the real thing.
Some essential jazz pianists to spend time with: Oscar Peterson for dazzling technique and swing feel, Bill Evans for harmonic beauty and sensitivity, Thelonious Monk for rhythmic individuality and wit, Herbie Hancock for the bridge between tradition and innovation, and McCoy Tyner for raw power and modal intensity. Bud Powell is essential for bebop, and Fats Waller for early stride and swing.
In lessons, a good teacher will help you internalize swing through rhythm exercises, call-and-response, and playing along with recordings — turning what you hear into something you can reproduce and eventually make your own.


