Such a positively presented, easy to follow, inspiring and important lesson. Somebody please should have shown me this 40 years ago. Well, never too late to pass it on to someone in need. Teachers like you truly make this world a better place - thank you so much!
This is such a genius intro to piano, and to keyboards in general. I could wish I'd started my keys journey with this little instruction. Thanks for putting this together, Mr M!
I'm commenting here as the beginner I am -- a few years into guitar, a few months into music theory, and very early into piano -- and, wow, I can't believe this makes sense to me and I can actually play it! True testament to how extraordinarily darn good you are at this. Thank you!
thanks, this are wonderful hints for person like me who straggle and hav problem with boring exercises those are melodic and pushing, to go farther, tray, and the time is no more important, and I’m not a spring chicken, but with dicier, to achieve and shape own stile to be more smooth, on my keyboard. thanks again.
There are millions of technically highly accomplished pianists in the world but magnificently brilliant educators who are also great musicians such as the one and only Adam Maness are just rare gems… Not every technically capable musician is a great educator AT ALL…
This is all great and I appreciate the knowledge you impart but it would be much more useful for someone like me if you actually had some indents, coloured perhaps and diagrammatic fingerings of the chords other than the music notation. It's too late for me to bother about conventional notation but I am still interested in finding out more about these shapes and their connections.
Good video! Got here from looking into the mu chord, and I think it's probably important to mention Steely Dan made sure the 2 and 3 stayed right next to each other in all voicings, just to get that whole tone dissonance versus a plain add2/add9 chord.
That's a great take on a 2-5-1 type scheme. I love it 👍I always favored slash chords, because they generally reduce complexity and the voicings still sound polished.
"So, an inversion, if you don't know (or if you're a drummer) ...) lol Gotta love our drummers, not only for their hip groove but because they help keep our time feel honest. All my favourite metronomes are drum tracks. Yeah, I like to say nice things like that right after I tell a drummer joke, because those people like to hit stuff just for fun. 😅
Your work is so good! Really helping me uncover some gaps in my understanding of music. Thanks so much for taking the time to make these videos! I’m gonna keep watching and playing with!
I am a long time player but always can learn something new, even from EZ lessons. Good stuff. As a suggestion but not a ctiticism, you say right off the bat that this is for non-players. I think non-players might want to have an example or two of how these EZ chords can be put together to be able to play a well known standard. rather than just a sequence of nice-sounding chords.
At a certain level (a pretty basic level) a musician has to understand tension and release. And we get that with 1 chords and 5 chords no matter the genre, it’s virtually everything harmonically. As for a 2-5-1 (from my experience starting on guitar playing rock) I’ve seen guys playing 40 years who don’t understand it or even know what it means and yet it’s something that was covered in my first 6 months of jazz guit lessons as a teen. I guess I’m taking non-players to mean non piano players vs people with little to zero musical background period.
Actually, as a non-pianist musician (bass with some sax and a little guitar) this lesson is better without including a specific tune. It gives me everything I need to start making good sounds on keys, with enough detail to start applying it to songs of my choosing. Very empowering!
I remember before I really started learning to play piano and practiced a lot I was listening to Black Cow by Steely Dan. I thought man that keyboard sounds so good. I know this is probably way out of my league but I'm gonna give it a shot. The first verse only took me three minutes to learn by ear and I thought Ok maybe I will learn to play piano
I often have to think like this on the fly with extended chords. E.G. Maj7#11 as a major triad in the left hand and a minor triad a half step down in the right hand. Or a min13 being a min7 in the left hand (not a triad oops) and a minor triad a whole step up in the right hand.
Back in the 70s there was a Steely Dan songbook that had an explanation of the Mu chord. And I must tell you that it was not the inversion you show here. The Mu chord was strictly a major triad with an added 2, as in "Rikki," for example. The key to its sound was the whole step interval between the 2rd and 3rd. (On keys, the right-hand root could also be included, but on guitar the upper root had to be omitted. [So 1-5-2-3-5.] ) Yes, the voicing you show here has the same notes, but it's not a Mu voicing. I've seen that voicing presented elsewhere as a Mu chord, but it's really not.
@@SolarMumuns According to whom? I know the Peg voicing, I learned it off the record when I was a teenager. They used it often. But while it has the same notes, it's a different voicing than the Mu major. It was strictly their substitute for a major triad, with the 2nd and 3rd next to each other--that's the key to its sound. The other one has 4ths, different sound, different application--usually 3rd in the bass. I'm not going to argue this. Bye.
Me, a drummer: I get the inversion joke, but you didn't flip your sticks. Me, a percussionist learning piano: Shh, drummer. You can be the metronome if you want something to do.
I've been learning some gospel lately, and I've been seeing this chord a lot, but the right hand seems to closed voicing rather than spread like in this example. Eric Whitacre does something similar in one of his pieces(I can't remember which one), but with a natural 11 instead of the 9th and right next to each other (eg. D+Bb Eb+F)
I’m sorry but I just have to ask, does a G7sus4 contain the note A? The F major chord has an A in it. A is the 9th of the chord G so then the chord would be G9sus4. Just a detail, I know, but I still think it’s good to clarify! Great vid overall:)
I play a sus2 by just replacing the 3 with the 2. If sus4 is called for I play the 4 rather than the 3. To your point, I hadn't thought the A belongs in the Gsus4. Only if the chart just says "sus" I'll play both the 2 and 4; however, I've found that chord symbols are often used casually, and jazz harmony often adds notes that aren't necessarily implied by the chord symbol. No one I used to play with when I was beginning could explain this, so I worked it out myself and will assume it's correct until someone with more formal theory tells me why I'm wrong. I always apply those rules rigidly and dogmatically, except when I feel like doing something else. 😮😅
What's Mu? The personal taste of cows? 😆 But seriously...does anybody know why it's called Mu? ...Anyway I love that triad sus11 easy peasy sound from the James Taylor 70's records! ❣😍👏... and when songs where made of artisan actual sounds
hmmmm so if i am hammering away on something that sounds like a one i can just move it up a degree and i may well get a five..... interesting. this may seem like an EZ lesson but like many simple things it's actually quite profound.
Ooh, Carole King voicings. Or could be Stevie Wonder. Not crazy about the sound at 14:05. That C in juxtapose with the B clangs in my ear. But otherwise really like your voicing ideas. BTW, I just realized that G-SUS is the Ultimate gospel chord - LOL.
Do people make drummer jokes since they aren't in a decent band so they only know drummers as mediocre as themselves but need to cope with the pain that in any great jazz/rock/fusion/metal band the drummer is usually the best player?
"An inversion.. if you don't know or are a drummer.." 😂 That one got me and I'm a drummer
the laugh he did aswell
Such a positively presented, easy to follow, inspiring and important lesson. Somebody please should have shown me this 40 years ago. Well, never too late to pass it on to someone in need. Teachers like you truly make this world a better place - thank you so much!
It's not unusual to be loved by anyone.. 🎶🎶🎶
☺ "I'm not mad at that" Made my day!
Finally, an Open Studio/Steely Dan Collab!! I can die happy now
U hav gift to pass something to the people with the understanding way!!!!! with not hide agenda!!!
This is such a genius intro to piano, and to keyboards in general. I could wish I'd started my keys journey with this little instruction. Thanks for putting this together, Mr M!
2:09 shots fired 🤭👀🚨
Fantastic lesson Adam, the way you explain everything is fantastic. Thank you so very much.
I'm commenting here as the beginner I am -- a few years into guitar, a few months into music theory, and very early into piano -- and, wow, I can't believe this makes sense to me and I can actually play it! True testament to how extraordinarily darn good you are at this. Thank you!
thanks, this are wonderful hints for person like me who straggle and hav problem with boring exercises those are melodic and pushing, to go farther, tray, and the time is no more important, and I’m not a spring chicken, but with dicier, to achieve and shape own stile to be more smooth, on my keyboard. thanks again.
There are millions of technically highly accomplished pianists in the world but magnificently brilliant educators who are also great musicians such as the one and only Adam Maness are just rare gems… Not every technically capable musician is a great educator AT ALL…
This is all great and I appreciate the knowledge you impart but it would be much more useful for someone like me if you actually had some indents, coloured perhaps and diagrammatic fingerings of the chords other than the music notation. It's too late for me to bother about conventional notation but I am still interested in finding out more about these shapes and their connections.
Man, I’m always coming back to EZ chords. The groove is in the EZ! Great stuff Adam.
The mu chord is such a great tool on bass because it is such an easy shape to catch while playing and helps make some cool chromatic motion.
Keep up the high quality. Always appreciate that you get right into the material. And the attitude is just right too.
This is a perfect lesson for me, being someone who is middling at piano and loves those sweet and spicy jazz chords.
So satisfying to follow this lesson! Simple enough but so lovely sounding ideas. Great stuff, thanks for sharing!
Really enjoying the presentation of this show. Looking forward to seeing more! Thank you.
Good video! Got here from looking into the mu chord, and I think it's probably important to mention Steely Dan made sure the 2 and 3 stayed right next to each other in all voicings, just to get that whole tone dissonance versus a plain add2/add9 chord.
Gosh...you r such a great teacher ! Thx man !
That's a great take on a 2-5-1 type scheme. I love it 👍I always favored slash chords, because they generally reduce complexity and the voicings still sound polished.
Thank you Adam.
This is exactly what I need.
"So, an inversion, if you don't know (or if you're a drummer) ...) lol
Gotta love our drummers, not only for their hip groove but because they help keep our time feel honest. All my favourite metronomes are drum tracks.
Yeah, I like to say nice things like that right after I tell a drummer joke, because those people like to hit stuff just for fun. 😅
Your “or a drummer” comment was hilarious. It brought me back to college theory classes and the very lost percussion majors!
Always interesting and educational. Thank you for your vidéos.
"if you don't know, or you're a drummer..." (2:09)😂
Amazingly EZ! Another outstanding lesson. I love this channel!! Thank you!
"When you're a drummer"? I heard that.
Much needed. Thank you, Adam. 🌹🌹🌹🌹
Awesome! Loved the EZ presentation!!
Great fundamentally sounded stuff to know. It's great for all levels. You can always touch up on fundamentals. Great job Adam!
This video is so helpful.
Your work is so good! Really helping me uncover some gaps in my understanding of music. Thanks so much for taking the time to make these videos! I’m gonna keep watching and playing with!
I am a long time player but always can learn something new, even from EZ lessons. Good stuff. As a suggestion but not a ctiticism, you say right off the bat that this is for non-players. I think non-players might want to have an example or two of how these EZ chords can be put together to be able to play a well known standard. rather than just a sequence of nice-sounding chords.
At a certain level (a pretty basic level) a musician has to understand tension and release. And we get that with 1 chords and 5 chords no matter the genre, it’s virtually everything harmonically. As for a 2-5-1 (from my experience starting on guitar playing rock) I’ve seen guys playing 40 years who don’t understand it or even know what it means and yet it’s something that was covered in my first 6 months of jazz guit lessons as a teen. I guess I’m taking non-players to mean non piano players vs people with little to zero musical background period.
Actually, as a non-pianist musician (bass with some sax and a little guitar) this lesson is better without including a specific tune. It gives me everything I need to start making good sounds on keys, with enough detail to start applying it to songs of my choosing. Very empowering!
I remember before I really started learning to play piano and practiced a lot I was listening to Black Cow by Steely Dan. I thought man that keyboard sounds so good. I know this is probably way out of my league but I'm gonna give it a shot. The first verse only took me three minutes to learn by ear and I thought Ok maybe I will learn to play piano
Man I really enjoy your videos. You are a great teacher.
I often have to think like this on the fly with extended chords. E.G. Maj7#11 as a major triad in the left hand and a minor triad a half step down in the right hand. Or a min13 being a min7 in the left hand (not a triad oops) and a minor triad a whole step up in the right hand.
Great demonstration. I started out on drums so I fall squarely in the middle of your target group.
once again thank you
Congrats on 100k subs
You deserve it
Adam you the man.
AMAZING VIDEO AMAZING VIDEO AMAAAAAAAZING video!
well done. always good!
Really awesome info thank you
A lot of the earlier examples sounded like Carole King LOL!
At 5 minutes - that second inversion is “I think I’ll call it morning”
Back in the 70s there was a Steely Dan songbook that had an explanation of the Mu chord. And I must tell you that it was not the inversion you show here. The Mu chord was strictly a major triad with an added 2, as in "Rikki," for example. The key to its sound was the whole step interval between the 2rd and 3rd. (On keys, the right-hand root could also be included, but on guitar the upper root had to be omitted. [So 1-5-2-3-5.] ) Yes, the voicing you show here has the same notes, but it's not a Mu voicing. I've seen that voicing presented elsewhere as a Mu chord, but it's really not.
Actually, Steely Dan have several Mu voicings - it's not just one. The one in Rikki is not the same as the ones used on the Aja album.
ua-cam.com/video/DP_2r9zbaIY/v-deo.html Here Donald plays the voicing used in this video
@@SolarMumuns According to whom? I know the Peg voicing, I learned it off the record when I was a teenager. They used it often. But while it has the same notes, it's a different voicing than the Mu major. It was strictly their substitute for a major triad, with the 2nd and 3rd next to each other--that's the key to its sound. The other one has 4ths, different sound, different application--usually 3rd in the bass. I'm not going to argue this. Bye.
Nice! Thank you, Adam.
awesome video
Love this!
Hey Adam, you’ve forgot to mention us, guitar players🥺😢… I love your videos, you are a top bloke, great content and great delivery…. Cheers 🇦🇺
I'm having trouble with that G7(SUS4) chord...thinking it should be a G9(sus4) shell...GACF?
Me, a drummer: I get the inversion joke, but you didn't flip your sticks.
Me, a percussionist learning piano: Shh, drummer. You can be the metronome if you want something to do.
Who else is singing the chorus to “ All This Love “ by DeBarge ? 🙋🏾♂️
James Taylor (places in my past etc.) and Carole King got a lot of mileage out of those first two chords!
I need this theory. I am minoring in music and I haven’t taken music theory yet. But this is very helpful thank you.
Adam would you and peter consider analyzing/transcribing some of anomalie’s music? He has some of the most modern and interesting sounding jazz licks
I've been learning some gospel lately, and I've been seeing this chord a lot, but the right hand seems to closed voicing rather than spread like in this example. Eric Whitacre does something similar in one of his pieces(I can't remember which one), but with a natural 11 instead of the 9th and right next to each other (eg. D+Bb Eb+F)
Mu chords with Adam Muness!
Can you guys do a video on tunes like Nefertiti and Pinnochio? How the lead sheets wrong and better changes than them?
11:59 El DeBarge starts singing over the min ii-V-i *“And all this love is waiting for you…”* But he ends on a GMaj7 instead of a G7sus4
Put metronome on 2 and 4, that's the jazz way
Hey Adam, I feel insulted when you said: "If you don't know or you are a drummer" hahahahaha. Joking. Great content.
.."if you don't know or if you are a drummer" :D
'you can hear townsend'
"...or if you're a drummer..." 😂
I'm here for the mu chord
That mu chord didn't click for me until I started thinking of it as a Bm7 with a b13. Is that wrong?
Wouldnt that be a G7sus2 because youre playing an A in the F chord?
How about a mu b2 sus4 chord ?
Question from a drummer who does know his inversions. Where does the A come in for a G7sus4? The A is a 9th. Shouldn’t it be G7sus9?
I’m sorry but I just have to ask, does a G7sus4 contain the note A? The F major chord has an A in it. A is the 9th of the chord G so then the chord would be G9sus4.
Just a detail, I know, but I still think it’s good to clarify! Great vid overall:)
I play a sus2 by just replacing the 3 with the 2. If sus4 is called for I play the 4 rather than the 3. To your point, I hadn't thought the A belongs in the Gsus4. Only if the chart just says "sus" I'll play both the 2 and 4; however, I've found that chord symbols are often used casually, and jazz harmony often adds notes that aren't necessarily implied by the chord symbol.
No one I used to play with when I was beginning could explain this, so I worked it out myself and will assume it's correct until someone with more formal theory tells me why I'm wrong.
I always apply those rules rigidly and dogmatically, except when I feel like doing something else. 😮😅
The a is the 9th degree in the g chord so just an extension
I'm confused: I thought G7sus4 = G C D F, and that G A C F = G7sus4add9 or F/G
5:06 Dununununuh... nunuh-nuh, dununununuh... nunuh-nuh
Not 10 seconds in and the bass goes Vulpeck hard
👌
EZ is an easy way to spell “easy”.
Why does a G7sus4 have an A?
The drummer insult lowkey hurt😢
Learn to work the saxophone…
Drink scotch whiskey,all night longg
lol “an inversion, if you don’t know, or you’re a drummer”
Brother you know that aint nothing but church.. just tell the people. Lol
What's Mu? The personal taste of cows? 😆 But seriously...does anybody know why it's called Mu? ...Anyway I love that triad sus11 easy peasy sound from the James Taylor 70's records! ❣😍👏... and when songs where made of artisan actual sounds
how's that a G7sus? That's F/G. or perhaps Gsus2no5. If it was G7sus, it would spell G-C-D-F.
hmmmm so if i am hammering away on something that sounds like a one i can just move it up a degree and i may well get a five..... interesting. this may seem like an EZ lesson but like many simple things it's actually quite profound.
Ooh, Carole King voicings. Or could be Stevie Wonder. Not crazy about the sound at 14:05. That C in juxtapose with the B clangs in my ear. But otherwise really like your voicing ideas. BTW, I just realized that G-SUS is the Ultimate gospel chord - LOL.
Gsus=Jesus- the very best SUS
if you don't know or you are a drummer ... 😂
Do people make drummer jokes since they aren't in a decent band so they only know drummers as mediocre as themselves but need to cope with the pain that in any great jazz/rock/fusion/metal band the drummer is usually the best player?
DRUMMERS ask you to play simple chords?????