The Nirvana Hit That Uses All 12 Notes
Вставка
- Опубліковано 27 кві 2024
- In today's episode I talk about a Nirvana hit song that uses all 12 chromatic notes in its melody and harmony.
ANNUAL SALE:
📚🎉 The Beato Ultimate Bundle - $89 FOR ALL OF My Courses: ⇢ rickbeato.com/
📘- The Beato Book Interactive - $99.00 value
🎸 - Beato Beginner Guitar - $159.00 value
👂- The Beato Ear Training Program - $99.00 value
🎸- The Quick Lessons Pro Guitar Course - $79.00 value
… all for just $89.00
Get it here: rickbeato.com/
ALSO ON SALE:
🎸 - Arpeggio Masterclass 50% OFF: beatoguitar.com
My Beato Club supporters:
Justin Scott
Terence Mark
Farren Mahjoor
Jason Murray
Lucienne Kilpatrick
Alexander Young
Jason Wagner
Todd Ladner
Rob Kline
Nicholas Long
Tim Benson
Leonardo Martins da Costa Rodrigues
Eddie Perez
David Solomon
MICHAEL JOYCE
Stephen Stubbs
colin stead
Jonathan Wentworth-Linton
Patrick Payne
MATTHEW KARIS
Matthew Barouch
Shaun Samuels
Danny Kurywchak
Gregory Reedy
Sean Coleman
Alexander Verbitskiy
CL Turner
Jason Pappafotis
John Fulford
Margaret Carno
Robert C
David M Combs
Eric Flatt
Reto Spoerli
Herr Moritz Adam
Monte St. Johns
Jon Beezley
Peter DeVault
Eric Nabstedt
Eric Beggs
Rich Germano
Brian Bloom
Peter Pillitteri
Sale ends Tueday Night:
📚🎉 The Beato Ultimate Bundle - $89 FOR ALL OF My Courses: ⇢ rickbeato.com/
📘- The Beato Book Interactive - $99.00 value
🎸 - Beato Beginner Guitar - $159.00 value
👂- The Beato Ear Training Program - $99.00 value
🎸- The Quick Lessons Pro Guitar Course - $79.00 value
… all for just $89.00
Get it here: rickbeato.com/
We need a "Beato UnPlugged"
No auto-tune
No hackery
Just an (perhaps up and coming) artist and your mics
I thought there was a song on def leppards hysteria that had not just all 12 but every note on the fretboard. Don't tell my ex but...nirvana was good..
Saying that the last E note, the b9 sang in harmony over an Eb Maj chord is applicable and should count as a valid melody note in your "All 12 Notes" claim is pretty dubious, in my opinion. I'm not sold on the idea.
That D chord before the chorus is really wild, though.
Rick!!!!! Can I send you a DM about the course?
Paul Simon's "Still Crazy After All These Years" and Jobim's "Girl From Ipanema" uses all 12 notes!
Brazilian bossa nova is full of fancy chords. Really nice
Them Bones by Alice In Chains does too. Took me a while to check and make sure but it's true. One of the notes is only contained in the backing vocals.
Does Bohemian Rhapsody use all 12? It seems like it must
I'm pretty sure Girl From Ipanema uses MORE than 12 notes! LOL
Yoko made up some new notes..
Also "Les Lacs du Connemara" by Michel Sardou
Kurt did it intuitively, and it sounds amazing. For me, that's exactly the definition of a genius.
only took 30 years for everyone to realize it.
@@MrBriankjeld What are you talking about? We all knew he was a genius when the music was coming out.
Did he, though? What if the first 11 notes were intuitive, then he realised and threw in that D to complete the 12? Then maybe he thought he wouldn't make it obvious and put it in a part where the vocals could easily obscure it, and it's like an Easter egg, waiting for people to find it.
@@VaultBoy13this
@@MrBriankjeld Everyone exept most likely millions of people.
In bloom is 33 years old. I think I am going to sit down 😂
Hey sonny want a Werther's original? Lol we're old 🤣
Jesus that's my age. And I grew up loving this song, it was the first song I asked my instructor to teach me when I moved onto barre chords.
Yeah, because our knees hurt lol.
You actually got up?
Still trying too.
As a fellow songwriter- musician it was very clear in the early 90s that Cobain's chordal inclinations were quirky, Beatlesque and richly complex. He had done his homework and it showed yet he wasn't copying anyone. It was a beautiful time in music 😊
Great descript👍
That is why the recent Nirvana revisionists are sorely mistaken. Cobain, although he was not a musician trained in the traditional sense, his musical instincts were amazing.
@jonlohrenz5446 Indeed. You cannot find a single, successful musician that would call either the Beatles or Nirvana over-rated.
I am a lifelong Nirvana fan and Kurt Cobain copied everyone he liked, from a little bit to near completely.
He did copy
Kurt's genius was his ability to weave a memorable melody through a parallel harmony based chord progression basically.
Good way to put it. I think Rick has said something similar: he employs sophisticated jazz techniques despite not having formal music training.
@@Alex-js5lg As geniuses seem able to do.
Luke Skywalker threading the photon torpedo through that exhaust port.
folk punk Jimi Hendrix id say.
@@benjamink7105photon torpedoes are from Star Trek 😅
I've been waiting my whole life for the right time to say this. Clearly, that time is now.
The 1969 hit single "Tracy," by The Cuff Links, contains not just all 12 notes, but all twelve major CHORDS. And six of the twelve minor chords, too.
Lolol
I just had to look it up. That is the most 60s sounding song ever. And only like two mins. All over the road but fun!
What a song!
Seriously that was like a perfect two minutes wow.
Oh man one of my favorite songs ever!
Yo estaba esperando este comentario xD
It’s stuff like this that shows how great of a songwriter Kurt was, dude had a great sense of melodicism when it comes to writing guitar parts
great sense of melody* melodicism would’ve been underlined red, no? his melodies are also more prominent in the vocal, whereas guitar is more harmony
I‘m sitting here in a city in Germany with my morning coffee just before a really long work day in my Nirvana shirt and enjoy this video so much. And I have no clue of musical theory. I love how enthusiastic Rick is about great melody writing.
Düsseldorf?
Pleased that i worked out which song it was on my own. So grateful for Nirvana. The music made being a teenager bearable
So did Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Stone Temple Pilots, Smashing Pumpkins, The Offspring, Metallica, Pantera, Marylin Manson, White Zombie, I mean, I could go on and on and on. Being a kid in the 90s was to be musically spoiled like the kids in the 60s.
Truth I was born in 80 and I don't think kids these days will ever experience what we had back in the 90's. Remember buying a CD and putting it in just to listen from start to finish..the internet instant gratification ruined that experience for kids getting into music these days, the internet has its pros and cons but music in that decade is unmatched
“Aneurysm” immediately came to mind but “In Bloom” was the next obvious choice. The former arguably a top 3 Nirvana song.
Listen… I’m going to say Aneurysm is #1. Would love to see Rick cover this song. Only he could explain to me why I’m so impressed by it (I’m not a musician, I have no clue).
Aneurysm live especially at Reading is fucking dope
@Marleystrummer my very favorite Nirvana song. I like the studio version too but it's sooo much better live imo
Aneurysm wasn't even remotely a hit so figured it wasn't even a choice.
This and Dive.
"Just" by Radiohead uses all 12 notes. It was a deliberate challenge between Thom and Jonny to see who could write a song with the most chords.
Knives Out is the only Radiohead song featuring all 12 notes.
@@AlexDainese nope, "Knives Out" is not the only one. rome8180 is correct about "Just." The guitar parts alone use all 12 notes, without even adding melody notes
I think Paranoid Android as well! It has too! It has like 20 different chords
@@akeithing1841 that makes sense- I thought of and checked "Just" first. "Paranoid Android" to my memory doesn't use any kind of F#/Gb, C#/Db, or B root chord, but those notes APPEAR in vocal parts (and the bass line is super chromatic), which Rick was counting here
Great song, very complex songs in Radioheads library
While I no longer actively play an instrument( it's been 3 decades), I love these educational pieces you're doing and constantly look forward to them. It makes me even think about getting back into music.
Do it!
Yup. Do it ! Today ! 😁
Do it! Greetings from Colombia :)
Professional musician for 30 years. Was into Nirvana big time when they were releasing albums. Nevermind came out when I was in high school. I always thought he was a genius writer, but all my musician friends and fellow classmates during college while studying music thought I was crazy for liking them. I am proud that I have been, and always ways a fan. Kurt was amazing at taking weird chord progressions and making beautiful melodies. Nice to see him being appreciated.
***I remembered I also loved the lyrics of this song in particular because it was about someone who likes Nirvana’s pretty sounds but “knows not what it means”. And it was a cheeky way for Kurt to acknowledge that as he got famous that their were going to be fans that sang along, but didn’t really get who they were. And where they came from. Genius!!
I couldn't agree more. I went through the same thing... I was 17 in 1994. I didn't listen to the radio very often, let alone TV, and I'm a little French boy (Daft Punk idiot haha) so I wasn't aware of what was happening at the end of 1991 and a friend (who had introduced me to Blodd Sugar Sex Magic) told me : « you absolutely have to listen to Nirvana, it's huge… » And because he was mostly a fan of gansta rap, I was seriously blasted. I said « okay, I'll see when I’ll got time… » Then I bumped into a guy I introduced to metal culture few years before, a pretty simple guy... And I mentioned it to him, like : « Have you heard of it ? » And he said : « Well, all the songs sound aslike the same… » So I left it at that, several months... Until I suddenly heard Smells Like Teen Spirit at a party (in the summer 1992) very amplified... I was literally hallucinating ! I was in, immediatly, understanding what happenned really.
Then I discovered an extremely varied and well-written album. Later, I was the only one around me who understood what this pure musical instinct it was. And I listened to In Utero over and over again… Some guys near to me appreciated a bit, but few understood the immensity of the phenomenon. Finally, since I'm strongly a musician, I think it’s in my deeply in my mind, in my sensitivity. Very later one of my psychiatrists diagnosed me as « being a potential genius and not just HIP/HEP » and I laught and tried to explain to her a long that genius did not really exist and this is more complex (personnal history and immersive works) but she said in order to conclude « sorry but I did not understand a word of your explanation » LOL… But notice that : I have the same pathology as the concerned guy today (Kurt Cobain), so it brought us closer together in terms of sensitivity, I think.
You are maybe « someone like that » too I guess, to understand really this, I mean... And it is quite rare even if many people were touched by this great music. 😉
Its not just about anyone, it's about Kurt's friend Dylan, the frontman of the band Earth.
@Overlorddz was just going to post the exact some thing. Kurt finished in bloom in April 1990 at Butch Vigs studio in Wisconsin. He had been working on the tune for a while before that so yeah, the misconception that its about the "fans" that came later as the OP claimed is wrong. Funny that so many people think they know what KC was inferring in his lyrics but most of the time he didn't even HAVE lyrics until right before the song was finished in the studio. Some of them written in the LAST HOUR OR SO!!!
But hey, your friends learned what a suspended triple sus7 chord is 🧐 (who cares).
@@Overlorddz That’s interesting, I’d never read about that reference. I guess I just made up that story myself or someone else told me. I just remember being blown away by Kurt’s lyrics back in the day. Still am. He was brilliant in throwing together stories and little burns in his lyrics. Personally I’m not much of a lyric person either. I write, and I usually come up with melody and try to figure out some words to fit more as an afterthought. Son when I first got Nevermind I hummed along to songs and picked out words where I could. I would read the lyric page later on. And i had this moment when I first read in Bloom’s lyrics when I was listening and singing Along when I realized what he was saying about “sing along to all our pretty sounds” and “knows not what it means” and I just though You Brilliant motherfucker!! Haha. Here I am, a big dope singing along to a catchy tune, and he’s taking about someone singing along to his catchy tune. It blew my mind how smart that was
Most of the bands in Seattle were incredibly intelligent songwriters. Soundgarden,AIC, Pearl Jam etc. Just incredible stuff.
Wow, multi million bands have intelligent songwriting? We have Sherlock Holmes here
@@amsluNews flash: many very famous songs only use 2-3 chords and the melodies are super basic. Welcome
To pop music!
MELVINS.
@@shruggzdastr8-facedclown The Shins are from Albuquerque, Sleater-Kinney are from Olympia, and Iron & Wine is from SC.
Don’t forget Hendrix, Heart, Sunny Day Real Estate, (and Death Cab for Cutie pretty much counts)
In Bloom and Lithium.. surprisingly sophisticated. Best Nirvana tunes.
The bass line mixed with the guitar is intricately gorgeous
No Nirvana song is sophisticated. That’s like saying a circle can be a square. Kurt was a good poet; terrible musician.
@@Nmdixon-cu7vmthey do exist. The majority was pretty simple. To say he was a terrible musician is so beyond naive it’s unbelievable.
@stanclips8227 it's just a lazy take. This stream is by someone who knows music and theory inside and out, and he gushes about Kurt's musicianship the whole time.
@@Nmdixon-cu7vm Nah, you're wrong
Everyone should play a musical instrument. And the better you get, the more you appreciate great musicians
👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻
Been playing 30 years, 10 of them semi professional circuit.....and the more I learned the more I realized these so called amazing talents aren't any better then bar band players that got lucky and in cases like his we held a junkie on a pedestal by teenagers.
As a non-musician I find this fascinating, but "In Bloom" is just a great choice. One of my favorite Nirvana songs, I find the lyrics to be so interesting and fun to listen to.
I like your response to the question about Kurt analyzing himself.
How come if Rick knows all these secret melody recipes, he hasn’t written one timeless melody, like nirvana did. Not one.
@@GovernmentalCtrlBecause skills, knowledge, and writing good songs are three different things.
@@GovernmentalCtrlhe's on a different level. The creator may not even know what he's doing but Rick will lay it out there plain and simple for dudes like me to "get it" in detail and with enthusiasm, intellect and total fascination. Example, I can do some tricky stuff on a guitar but have no clue how to write it out, what it's called, how to explain my actions or demonstrate it either. The man has this.. We need Rick Beato.
He was a producer and now a youtuber. He probably has no desire to be a writer, a lot of people dont but can still understand and appreciate art. This kind of argument boggles my mind.
Beato would get the dave grohl's treatment on unplugged: oh just shut up
What an immense fortune that we have a guy like Beato: immensely knowledgeable, deep, honest and entertaining.
Right? I wish I could find something that got me as excited as he gets about this stuff. Beautiful to see.
"He didn't know, but I know, and now you know."
I swear I hear a variation of this quote everytime Rick covers a Nirvana song.
This time he just added a little spice to it by saying Kurt's ears also knew.
Kurt knew.
Kurt was not an athlete on the fretboard but he did have this way of coming up with cord riffs that fit the theme of the song and I've never heard any other guitarist quite like him in that area.
Like a 90s Jimmy Page
@@weezadamRight, as in "Rain Song", "Kashmir", "Over the Hills and Far Away", for example.
He did finger tapping in teen spirit video! 🤓
Elliott Smith had similarly complex chord progressions
How gay
10:14 THIS ! Rick's the man .
Yeah man. Such a good point. I remember Rick saying on another video he did on Nirvana (may have been a WMTSG). "People say Kurt didn't know what he was playing, bur I know what he is playing and it's genius."
Exactly
What's fascinating is that the bizarre D power chord that shows up goes great with the F that Kurt is singing, and... it's technically not a chromatic chord. The song is in B flat major and the chord that's formed as a result of the note Kurt is singing and the chord below it is a D minor, the 3rd chord of the scale, which is actually a great way to bring it to the least chromatic part of the song, the chorus, until the 'Don't know what it means' bit, which Dave's harmony makes chromatic when he sings the E.
EDIT: It's also worth noting that if Kurt had played an A power chord while screaming an F, it probably would have sounded even more dissonant as that F would have clashed with the E in the A power chord. Until that point in the song, he never sung over that chord. If anything, this song proves that even if Kurt didn't know music theory, his ear certainly did.
(Kurt knew music theory)
That's a good point. It's almost as if, in the midst of all this chaos, Kurt said, "Wait! F note over an A major chord? _Let's not get crazy here!_ "
@@sagittated I said 'if'. But there's a very good chance that his whole 'DGAF' image was put on. There's proof that his journals were filled with the tiniest details of the recording process of In Utero, which mics were used to record drums, which mics were used for which amp, the settings on the amp, how far the mic should have been etc etc.
Cobain didn’t need to know a lot of music theory to be able to pick out the notes of each chord on his guitar and find a chord that contained the note he felt like singing. Or vice versa: to write a chord sequence and pick out notes to go with it. He definitely did not do these things purely by instinct.
Its super interesting there's this surprises about the D chord. For me and probably a lot of others that grew up on 80s punk that was super riffy, this is really intuitive choice for me. At one point I even tried to stop using this "trick" because I felt I relied on it too much. If you listen to bands along the lines of Minor Threat, CroMags, Agnostic Front, Misfits (danzig era), and even Melvins; they did this all the time- albeit not in the middle of a song that already had all other 11 notes! but still; i think his choice to go to D there was coming from that influence. I noticed someone in the streamed comments mentioned Fang as an influence; I had totally forgot about them but they were also huge on riffs.
I thought it would be Heart Shaped Box, which has such an unusual melody that drifts all over the place. Instead it turns out to be what SEEMS like a 'simple song' In Bloom. Cobain was a genius at turning the simple into the extraordinary, and since he wasn't a giant theorist, I think he got there basically by knowing the rock cliches and using them but also messing with them, mixed with following his natural talent with wherever it led him.
In Utero is my favorite Nirvana album. Heart Shaped Box and Rake Me are standouts IMO.
Best guitar lesson of this song around.
I took a course in musicology back in 1994, and one of teachers was rally ecstatic about Nirvana because of the harmonic progressions (I saw and heard Nirvana at Roskilde in 1992).
Lucky basssstud
I knew it was In Bloom ;)
Great analysis, we love you Rick!
Rick's love for music is AWESOME! One of my favorite shows on UA-cam!
In Bloom popped into my head as soon as Rick said the 12th note only appears in an immediate pre-chorus chord. Sweet
Same
Its like a musical blackout bingo.
Ha! Awesome.
This game should be played in a composition studies class😂
Wow, this just took me back to the first time I listened to Nevermind (c. 1992). Smells like Teen Spirit was awesome but then In Bloom started and it simply blew my mind away. To this day it is my favourite Nirvana song.
Oh Warren Haynes! I am so excited. Thank you!! One of my favorite guitarists ever! Cannot wait!!
Its awesome to find people who care as much about nirvana and their music as I do. Thank you for being fair and keeping your eyes open.
ted greene said nirvana was the only new thing to happen to american harmony in the 20th century. i didn't expect that.
I’d love to hear how The Beatles didn’t accomplish anything new
@@eliastristan1831 you'd have to ask ted. i'm sure he had it figured out.he gave out way more information than i could absorb in one sitting. it's out there somewhere.
@@eliastristan1831they weren’t American perhaps?
Though they did take strongly from Motown.
@@danielhoskins4690 You are absolutely right! Myb for not reading the comment properly lol
@@danielhoskins4690 Yk now that I think about it I definitely subconsciously think of many English musicians as Americans just because of how well I know them. We don’t have the Beatles, Pink Floyd, 2/3 of The Police, The smiths, the cure, Genesis, King Crimson, Led Zeppelin, Radiohead, The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Clash, Yes, ELO, etc(these aren’t bands specifically named because of their harmonic content they’re just my favorites). Like dang the Brits have us beat by miles🤕
There's actually an earlier Demo version of In Bloom that was recorded just before Chad was fired from the band. Its fascinating because at the end of the chorus, Kurt actually sings a full octave above the nevermind version in that very last melody note. It sounds so cool though. Kurt had a unique understanding of range and harmonies. They probably changed it up for the Nevrmind recording since Dave was doing back-up and the lower octave sounded smoother with his voice
Perfect answer to the comment about Cobain not wanting to analyze his music. Perfect.
I just started relearning guitar after a 20 yr hiatus and learned in bloom a few days ago. Such good timing for this video 😊
Love analyzing these amazing pop songs! Brings me back to my theory days in college. Use to try to break down NIN tracks. So good!
Kurt was very talented with melodies. I'm sure there is still a lot to discover in his legacy.
A real shame he’s gone. I think we would have seen some great stuff from him. He was working on more folk type stuff, aside from Nirvana
All that kind of stuff kurt don't care about 😂
I've heard a few newly released songs on the radio recently. I'm sure there's more to come.
@@wiseguy9202LOL no you havent. Why lie.
@@douglasdog1w
Seemingly off-topic but thematically linked on a deeper level: Tony Banks from Genesis wondered if you could write a song with as many chords as possible which all share the same top note. They ended up with the quirky song "Pigeons" (1977) which consists of 13 different chords which all share the note Bb at the top. Steve Hackett plays this note relentlessly the whole song through.
Thx for the vid. It was fun!
I love your videos, Rick! You shine a light on songs that become my favourites because you explain them so well. Thank you
SET THEM STRAIGHT, RICK!! 😃 I'm so glad that you analyze Nirvana's songs in the manner that you do!! 😃
I’ve been playing this song for over 20 years and honestly never realized the D chord before the chorus until right now.
Same here! Well, ten or 15 years...
I would mess around with the chords quite a bit, having no bass player, so I'm sure I've hinted at it "by mistake," but I've never acknowledged the full chord before.
Astonishing that we can learn so much from such a "simple" tune. That's what was so great about songs written before the internet age.
This was a really fun one to watch. Love the Nirvana appreciation too!
Rick, love your channel. You always teach me and make me realize and think of amazing songs and break them down.
I play a mountain dulcimer but I’m getting your 4 courses since I want to play guitar too, I’m sure they’ll help me understand modal tunings too.
Probably my favorite song on the album.
Nice Rick, love the response to the comment @ 10:12 so true.
You are amazing, Rick!
Thank you so much for doing this song
Dave has always said that Kurt was a great song writer, especially with an ear for melody and harmony, the guy had it all, guitar skill, great voice and look 😍
He has? I only hear Dave throwing backhanded compliments. Dave is jealous bc FF will never rise to the level of Nirvana.
I loved how one of his exes described how he looked. I forget which one it was. But she said that everyone sees him on Unplugged and he looks like a little angel boy up there. All perfect and stuff. But she said he had horrible acne, terrible posture, and I forget what else she used to describe him but she did use the word "sloth" somewhere in there. Lol it was hilarious
Franz Liszt's Faust Symphony famously opens with a tone row! Year 1857!
Mozart symphony 40 last movement uses all 12, 1788
Yeah, the list could go on... I'm not sure why this is even a conversation, honesty? I think Rick could've articulated the description a little better, by specifying that we're talking about a piece's chord changes, and the notes contained within all those chords that are changing through the progressions. Even then, I'd still argue that it's not that big of a deal, as there are plenty of examples. But think specifically "pop music", and such music that is *not* atonal... It might take a while, but I'm sure there's plenty that cover all 12 notes in a "pop piece", based on just their chords.
'Falling For You' by Weezer has chords using all 12 root notes. Great song!
Great song! One of my favorites off of Pinkerton 😁😁
It has a keychange mid guitar solo, amazing
10:28
But does Weezer have 31 million listeners like Nirvana?
Arguably their best song and the one you hear least talked about. Absolutely fantastic. My wife showed me Pinkerton in the early 2000s and it immediately clicked with me. I’ve grown a bit old and stuffy these days so I can’t really do Weezer. The lyrics are just a bit too goofy and adolescent for me to connect with anymore, but Rivers is honestly a virtuoso
@@blyndblitz yes, one of several key changes on Pinkerton… And they weren’t just key changes for the sake of it, either - they really gave you that emotional lift. Like Kurt, Rivers just had that intuitive ability to craft beautiful melodies and make you feel something
Rick, don't ever change, brother. I just love this stuff!!!
Loved this response! 10:09 to 11:04
"This is very sophisticated melody writing" . Keep it up Rick!
Missed it DANG BUT one song you've got to examine that fits the bill is "ASH" with their song "GOLDFINGER" it's got the most amazing key change in it and I think it ticks all the boxes
Excellent song!
Wow. The fact that you even know that song equals instant points in my book, not that my points mean anything lol. What a blast from the past though. I probably hadn’t thought of that band since the late 90s. Thank you for reminding me. Going to go play that song now
I’ve been hoping for a while that Rick would cover Goldfinger.
The change-up near the end of the verse is particularly unusual for a popular song, but very satisfying.
The fact that Tim Wheeler was virtually a kid at the time, is amazing.
Yes! The key change in the last part of the verses is just genius.
Also check chromaticism and octave displacement In Soundgarden‘s “Cold Bitch.” Also “Pretty Noose.”
Never disappointed watching you man 🍻
Pure Instinct! Kurt and Dave and Krist in two words. This stream is beautiful Rick, thank you brother 🖤⚡️
He was far from a “bad” guitarist. It’s a lot harder to be original playing power chords than using different scales and modes. The guy definitely knew his way around a fretboard. Like take SLTS for example. It starts in the Key of F, in standard tuning. Pre chorus he plays those two C and F notes, solo starts on an F and ends on an F and you’re not going to find a “bad” guitarist that can write a solo to a vocal melody, many times on the spot during recording, while staying in the right key and time throughout.
He had a good ear
I thought it would be “Milk It” from In Utero. In the intro and middle he’s playing all kinds of random clean notes. He hits most of the notes on the fretboard! 😂
You could say the same about Aneurysm with the lead up hahaha.
Great breakdown Rick! One of the first I learned to play, an incredible song.
Yet another confirmation of Kurt's genius and Rick's knowledges and ability to entertain people this way)
Here we are now entertain us!
Technically, this song is in Bb Dorian. One of my favorite Nirvana tunes! :)
Rick, I highly recommend checking out Feed the Biirds' cover of In Bloom. Some really cool reharm and production choices. Would love to see you do an analysis of it
That cover is so sick. Their whole Nirvana EP kicks ass. So well done
@@morphaybrothers3642 right???
New fan here Rick. I'm a musician as well. Mainly guitar and piano but love to play drums and bass also. Anyway I just wanted to thank you. I have learned so much about improving my playing from you. I got sober 4 years ago and am loving life. From Maryland near Baltimore City. Keep em coming brother you are a very good teacher
Love your show, Rick. And I enjoy it more since I am a classical guitar 🎸 player.
Kurt Cobain working his ass off to attain an advanced theory of music when no one's looking and now every musician going around saying he had "instinct" because he didn't change his underwear every day
Lol
His unwashed hair, potent stench and incessant screaming acting much like Clark Kent’s sunglasses.
The idea that you need to know theory to put your hands in a certain position or think that the sound from playing them sounds good is very ridiculous.
Theory is no replacement for taste or talent.
Wtf you mean?
I've played with some great players that just play by ear and no no theory but they know theory without knowing what theory is. Do you get me?
Always a thumb up for Rick here.
Absolutely love this guy's ability to breakdown a song. Bravo!
Haha, so cool to feel your passion for music Rick, whatever that means. Thank you. I love breaking down stuff, and do the maths as you tell. Of course understand makes music easier to learn and easier to get better at it 🙏🙏🙏
Yeah when you actually LEARN his chord progressions, there's a natural inclination towards chromatic progressions in his writing style that really feels like the kinda thing one might draw out of a course of jazz studies-moreso at least than a casual intake of Sabbath and the Beatles. I don't know. I think it really reflects on the kind of piercing gaze he had as a creative in general, a sort of natural radar for getting deep into the tissue of a concept without laying out obvious road signs along the way for his audience...
It’s not that deep. He just had a great ear and listened to a lot of music
@@BigTimeBruh I disagree, and a lot of bebop players didn't read music, they learned by ear and feel
@@abuharamso you think bebop is good to learn to write like Cobain?
Kurt was an extremely sharp guy with strong intuition. You can tell just by listening to him speak, whether it’s his encyclopedic knowledge of popular music or his sardonic wit, that he was far more intelligent than he’s given credit for
@@artistaccount lol did I SAY that? Ffs
Can we talk sbout how great the Lithium bassline and guitar melody harmonize together?
And now put that amazing vocal melody on top of all that. So good
@@jeffreyshaw3512 absolutely!
That chord progression alone is from another planet!
He has another one sort of similar, Verse Chorus Verse (aka In His Hands), but I don’t think it’s quite as bonkers as Lithium. But it’s still great and I love the structure.
The bass on the Nirvana songs is very melodic, if Krist wrote his own parts he has a little bit of genius as well. Really filled out the chords between the 1st and 5th and 8th of the power chord and then whatever Kurt was singing (3rd a lot the time) and then Krist is like here’s the 9th note or here’s the 2nd, you know what I mean? Just really stacking the notes which is a neat trick to use to expand the sonic range of a three piece group.
Add a drummer who can sing harmony and you have Nirvana!
(Note: am novice so make corrections as needed)
Watching this man work is fascinating
It's a joy and a pleasure seeing Rick talking about music.
We need a signature Beato Acoustic Gibson Guitar .
I saw the title and immediately *_knew_* it was “In Bloom”!!! Kurt was a genius in the way he could write progressions that *_shouldn’t_* sound good but do.
If it sounds good, but you think it shouldn’t, the problem clearly isn’t with reality. It’s simply yr misperception
Thank you Rick! ❤
Your analytics are a pleasure.
Rick's so musical it's in his name.
Gotta love it. The music journey continues!
As soon as I saw the title to this video, I immediately knew which song it had to be.
Your talent is Amazing! 😊
Rick rocks.
Seeing your face, I got the feeling he wrote it only to make his music teachers happy. He knew exactly what he was doing, every interview of his claiming differently, is understatement. He had chords drawn in his diary I had never heard of, though finishing music school. - Well, they are 'dentist-chords'.
Oh, I am playing this one on the bass with my band, It is so fun to play (I suck at the chorus, need to listen to it more). It's a great song, you are absolutely right, it sounds like it will be listened to for many more years.
I heard somewhere that In Bloom was a musical idea from Krist.
Also the drums are chad’s work. Dave recorded them for Nevermind but they are Chad’s.
I was going to comment the same but was sure someone would have beat me to it.
I wonder if Chad had come up with the backing vocals as well, though, or if that part is Dave.
@@oliver9089 ah yeah, I wonder.
What about songs like Radiohead's "Paranoid Android" or the Police's "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic"? They must come close.
What I always loved about Kurt and what really connected me to the music ...
was that Kurt was a genuine ARTIST, not just a musician. And you heard it in the originality
of the compositions within a lot of their songs, including "In Bloom"
It sounded as if it was organically created by a genius making art.
Hey! I actually did guess that right! In Bloom has always struck me as a song that went absolutely everywhere.
I'm one year younger than Kurt, and a musician, and I started Full Sail (recording arts) in 1991! And all of us were very excited about the records that were coming out at that time. And we were partying as hard as we were studying 🎸❤️ great times.
All 12, Master of Puppets. It's chromatic, but still amazing.
Very true. Undisputedly awesome song - one of Metal’s finest, of course, but nirvana could make chromaticism sound like top 40 pop, and that’s one of the things that made them unique
Rick's exclusively talking about the notes contained within the chords that are progressing--which, to be fair, he fails to specify in his video description. Using all 12 notes is actually very common, if we're not exclusively talking about the actual underlying chords. For example; how many chromatic lead runs have you heard? Ya follow me...?
You're great, I love you... ❤ From France
This is one of my all time favorite songs. Such a trip to play, so unconventional, and thats why I love it.
Love this channel
I think this song was tabbed out in a recent guitar world magazine
Dude. I love your content! I bought the Beato book. I am no where near your level of knowing theory, but I have written songs where I was intentionally trying to have those chromatic changes like this. One of my songs was that and some chord changes that I pinched off of Jeff Lynne, from the Telephone Line.
Always been my favorite Nirvana song . In bloom and Drain you
Awaken by Yes does the full circle of fifths.