Rise of the Triads (w/ Nicholas Veinoglou)
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- Опубліковано 23 січ 2024
- Check out Nicholas Veinoglou's website: www.thedonutdoctormusic.com
And his UA-cam channel: / thedonutdoctor
And his Instagram: / thedonutdoctor
And his TikTok: / thedonutdoctor
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Thanks again for hanging & nerding out with me!!! This was so fun
Nick, I had a vague sort of idea of this, but your explanation and demo absolutely nailed it, Thanks!
So glad to see you back, Gracie. I'm sure people are asking for all sorts of things, but I'd enjoy more sessions on chord progressions. Thank you.
Nick is so correct. Gracie is eloquent; she clearly and concisely explains
Great insights from a very talented player. The difficulty in doing the scales in reverse reminds me of how hard it is to say the alphabet backwards if you haven't practiced it. There is a big difference between "knowing something" and "knowing it forwards and backwards"!
Well said!
Sho nuff!
This should have been out of my pay grade, but it was so well explained and demonstrated that I'll be there soon. I really like that descending idea. I sometimes practice my scales descending, now I'll put more spice into doing it with a purpose.
Thanks mam. It was very academic and useful. Thanks so much❤
Excellent session. Thank you so much, both of you.
O wow, I totally missed this one three months ago. Very helpful!! Sounds so logical, but I never came to think this way. Surely going to experiment with that. Thanks for sharing Gracie and Nick👍
Always fascinating theory information and teaching, thank you Gracie 😊
Absolutely! More Sesame Street for musicians (me)😃
Thanks for the guitar spotlight in music theory!
❤️🎸🤘🏻
Hi Gracie,
I’ve completed all 40 of your Music Theory videos and I want to thank you for making all this material available. I am of that ubiquitous species; been playing guitar for over 50 years and still just intermediate. Over that time I’ve absorbed music theory sporadically from all kinds of sources. Your course really consolidated a lot of things for me and especially I learned a lot about the three different minor scales you covered and their associated diatonic chords. The videos on secondary dominants introduced me to a concept I’d never heard of. My favourite moment of the whole course was in the Diatonic 7th Chords of Major Keys lesson when you picked up your ukulele and started singing Heart and Soul. It was enchanting.
I’m going to subscribe to your channel. Take care!
Great stuff
Thanks so much!
AWESOME, many thanks for the insights!!!
Always such great content, so much essential knowledge, just wonderful theory videos.
Much appreciated!
I want to learn arpeggios on guitar too. I love the sound. Thanks Nick and Gracie. Never heard about dropping C and make it a minor and play em b and d. Etc Awesome.
So glad you enjoyed it!! ❤️❤️
Once shown, it seems too obvious to utilize the relative minor. But, I had to be shown (40 yrs a drummer).🤷🏻♂️
Great video Gracie and Nicholas. I am practicing arpeggios on ukulele, very important topic. Great approach Nicholas
Indeed!!!
Is there an arthropod buzzing round the gentleman’s head?🤣 Just teasing!
Thanks for another very informative video, Gracie.
That's awesome. Thank you. 🍩
Could you share some jazz lessons with us like 251, and interval usage in it ? Love and thank you ! ❤
Really good share❤🎉
good stuff, like it, thanks.
Wow thank you !!
Solved my problems.❤
Very nice.
Gracie, Still love your music touch ;)
Ohhhhhh!!! I just go to where the chord is on the neck and there the arpeggio is!!!
great video
I love theory! Kind of takes a mathematical approach. I've been playing( not professionally) for fun a one time. Why do we call the D the 9th not the 2nd?
I'm no expert but I've just finished watching all 40 of Gracie's Music Theory videos and this is what I've gleaned. D is the second note of the C major scale, so we would call D the second degree of the C major scale. However, as Gracie often points out, chords are basically built up by adding thirds. From the root C we go to E and then to G and we have our basic major triad. Then from G we can go up a third and come to B, with which we can make a dominant 7th or major 7th chord. From B we can go up another third and add a D to our chord. As you say, D is the second note in C major, but when it's added to a C chord we think of it as stacked on top of CEGB, so it's a 9th rather than a 2nd.
That makes perfect sense! Chords are built in 3rds!!! This has always driven me crazy but now I know why! Thanks for explaining that so well. 👍👍👍👍
Must watch from the beginning. I don't know Nicholas or Who are His heroes.
none of you ate donuts
Hahaha
You talk too long please.do the thing we tired listening too much lecture