Thanks for watching. It might have been better to indicate 'measure' instead of 'bar'. The chord in the 1st measure is "D". The chord in the 2nd measure is "G on D". So, please be aware that the chords change from measure to measure like this.
@@tommo7637 OK Thanks for your response. I already understand “measure” and “bar” to mean the same thing (certainly, though, some folks might not), so I was really wondering why it needed to be mentioned at all. I mean, it’s notated as sheet music, which means if someone can’t tell that the harmonic rhythm is one new harmony per measure then they probably can’t read the score in the first place, and therefore wouldn’t notice either way -right?
Very useful (the rest is something one can infer by ear). Perhaps, it is worth mentioning that this piano part was chiselled by a certain... Rick Wakeman.
thank you. In the absence of other instruments in the intro, I simply thought of translating the piano sounds into score. This is because when the another instrument sounds, it is difficult to tell whether it is the sound of the piano. I would be happy if you could appreciate how "Rick Wakeman", whom I respect, plays whole tune from this score.
@@tommo7637 In this piano intro, Rick Wakeman recurs to several of his peculiar embellishments, that sound a bit reminiscent of British baroque virginal music. This is definitely a nod toward most of the piano phrasing in his future (1973) LP "The six wives of Henry VIII".
@@GargesFriend Before the recording of 'Morning...' Stevens heard Wakeman playing some of the Six Wives music and asked him to adapt it for the recording.
@@SEGoddard Yes, Wakeman's The Six Wives project was in the pipeline (but its proper recording took place much later, between February and October 1972), while Cat Stevens recorded Morning Has Broken in March 1971 and released it as a single in January 1972. A detailed reconstruction is to be found here: ua-cam.com/video/yQg2tNur2bw/v-deo.html
Eowwww qué bonito ❤🥰🥰🥰
This is so beautiful, it would be great if you play the entire song..... 😊
Thanx for watching. I'll try.
I thing the same 👍🏻👏🏻
@@tommo7637🤗🤗🤗
I sang this at school morning assembly years before Cat sang it. It wasn't written by him.
Thanx for watching.
I knew too. This song is a hymn song.
Btw can u share the sheet music of the full song??... The music part changes later
This is a great performance of the intro, but you have it listed as a tutorial?
Thanx for watching. I'll try.
What does that mean, “beware of chords that change in bar units”?
Thanks for watching.
It might have been better to indicate 'measure' instead of 'bar'.
The chord in the 1st measure is "D".
The chord in the 2nd measure is "G on D".
So, please be aware that the chords change from measure to measure like this.
@@tommo7637 OK Thanks for your response. I already understand “measure” and “bar” to mean the same thing (certainly, though, some folks might not), so I was really wondering why it needed to be mentioned at all. I mean, it’s notated as sheet music, which means if someone can’t tell that the harmonic rhythm is one new harmony per measure then they probably can’t read the score in the first place, and therefore wouldn’t notice either way -right?
@@therealtruetwelfth798 It was better to show the chord name on the score. Thanks for your advice.
@@tommo7637 👍‼️🙏
Very useful (the rest is something one can infer by ear). Perhaps, it is worth mentioning that this piano part was chiselled by a certain... Rick Wakeman.
thank you.
In the absence of other instruments in the intro, I simply thought of translating the piano sounds into score.
This is because when the another instrument sounds, it is difficult to tell whether it is the sound of the piano.
I would be happy if you could appreciate how "Rick Wakeman", whom I respect, plays whole tune from this score.
@@tommo7637 In this piano intro, Rick Wakeman recurs to several of his peculiar embellishments, that sound a bit reminiscent of British baroque virginal music. This is definitely a nod toward most of the piano phrasing in his future (1973) LP "The six wives of Henry VIII".
@@GargesFriend Before the recording of 'Morning...' Stevens heard Wakeman playing some of the Six Wives music and asked him to adapt it for the recording.
@@SEGoddard Yes, Wakeman's The Six Wives project was in the pipeline (but its proper recording took place much later, between February and October 1972),
while Cat Stevens recorded Morning Has Broken in March 1971 and released it as a single in January 1972. A detailed reconstruction is to be found here: ua-cam.com/video/yQg2tNur2bw/v-deo.html