Music Theory and White Supremacy

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  • Опубліковано 12 тра 2024
  • Thanks to Phil Ewell and his paper:
    mtosmt.org/issues/mto.20.26.2...
    Support this channel: / adamneely
    SOURCES
    bit.ly/2ZdxpMW
    0:00 Introduction
    2:53 Part I - The White Racial Frame of Music Theory
    8:28 Part iim - North Indian Theory and Perspectives
    16:52 Part IIIm7b5 - Alternative Perspectives to Western Theory
    22:04 Part IVmaj7 - Music isn’t a Universal
    28:24 Part V7(b9,#9,b13) - Heinrich Schenker
    36:16 Part vim - Responses to Phil Ewell
    40:19 Part viio - Coda
    (⌐■_■)
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    Peace,
    Adam

КОМЕНТАРІ • 39 тис.

  • @vernise8138
    @vernise8138 2 роки тому +9619

    In high school I used to compose music heavily inspired by Japanese video games. When I showed my piano teacher, she said "it's not supposed to end on a chord like this" "there are certain rules you need to follow" this video helped me gain a new perspective on what that could have meant because she definitely didn't explain lol

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 2 роки тому +932

      That's a very dogmatic understanding of music, even with music theory. It's the THEORY of music and now the LAW of music for a reason. Also, Japanese video game OSTs aren't that compositionally different from _"`18th century European"_ compositions. She's being ridiculous. Other genres diverge in composition MUCH more.

    • @vernise8138
      @vernise8138 2 роки тому +97

      @@urphakeandgey6308 ya she pretty much killed my passion for composition but I hope to get back into it one day. Thanks for understanding

    • @halewhite2962
      @halewhite2962 2 роки тому +331

      Music theory, (Yes, the White, Eurocentric kind) helps to illuminate and explain patterns and rules of thumb. These rules can be broken in creative, musically pleasing ways, if you find a way to pull it off. It’s not “Laws” of music.

    • @litvinovbeats6301
      @litvinovbeats6301 2 роки тому +17

      Fuck rules

    • @hezekiahthompson6817
      @hezekiahthompson6817 2 роки тому +190

      I always felt composers like Yuki Kajiura and Shigeru Umebayashi had firm foundations in "classical", but they always had their own "groove" if I can say it like that. That makes them so much more approachable imo.

  • @samuraiguitarist
    @samuraiguitarist 3 роки тому +16755

    It would be a great feature if youtube showed what percentage of the video you watched beside your comment.

    • @sureleyyy
      @sureleyyy 3 роки тому +522

      **skips to last 3 seconds before commenting to trick the system*** /s

    • @iambeepbop2452
      @iambeepbop2452 3 роки тому +141

      what's your favourite ice cream flavour

    • @samuraiguitarist
      @samuraiguitarist 3 роки тому +1047

      @@iambeepbop2452 I personally really enjoy Ben and Jerry's "Watch the full video before making dumbass comments" with almond

    • @jacobgutierrez864
      @jacobgutierrez864 3 роки тому +391

      That or you can only leaves comments once you have finished 100% of the video. A lot of ignorant folks misrepresenting Adam’s position. But that was inevitable whenever you suggest racism is more than just bad words.

    • @gregdjentyguy9986
      @gregdjentyguy9986 3 роки тому +155

      As someone who disagrees with the video, let's add the feature, I'm for it.

  • @basedokadaizo
    @basedokadaizo 9 місяців тому +722

    i think what really grinds my gears about music theory is that they laud composers that broke the rules of the time (like Beethoven, Stravinsky) or had immense talent (Bach, Paganini), but we in the modern day under formal tutelage cannot break any of the rules ourselves because then it won't sound "correct", despite it being a more genuine expression.

    • @laughingachilles
      @laughingachilles 7 місяців тому +35

      None of them broke the mathematical basis underlying musical theory. Maybe that's the problem with musicians who comment on this without any knowledge of the mathematics. No matter how you try and crowbar race into the issue, the mathematics are quite clear. Black people greatly contributed certain aspects to music but the greatest examples of this fusion were mixed with western musical theory. Basically the music claimed by black people would not exist without western music theory. And once again this is based in mathematics.
      Why can't we just accept the beauty is in the combination instead of trying to claim it belongs to one race or the other?

    • @basedokadaizo
      @basedokadaizo 7 місяців тому +50

      @@laughingachilles applying an objective science like math to a subjective art form like music seems like only half the battle to me personally. yes, there is a lot of math in music, i'm aware of that myself, but subjective taste and objective data are so far removed from each other-- you can call a piece "wrong" but calling it "bad" leaves a bad taste in my mouth. that's my problem, not race. assuming any particular template to be "superior", white or black, is my problem more than anything.

    • @laughingachilles
      @laughingachilles 7 місяців тому +14

      @@basedokadaizo
      Here is the problem with your response...all of these systems involve mathematics! I would argue it is incredibly racist to suggest any system is outside of mathematics when they all follow maths in one way or another.
      Or do you believe that only westerners are capable of mathematics?

    • @basedokadaizo
      @basedokadaizo 6 місяців тому

      @@laughingachilles i... i literally just acknowledged there's math in music? i said my problem with the modern methods of music education boil down to restriction versus true expression? brother i dropped race at the door and wanted a GENUINE discussion about the flaws in modern music education, what the fuck is wrong with you?????

    • @basedokadaizo
      @basedokadaizo 6 місяців тому +25

      @@laughingachilles for real i am NOT letting this discussion revert after dropping my actual honest opinion on the issues of music education you are NOT doing that shit to me this time this is the ONE topic i go absolutely ballistic over

  • @papercraftcynder5430
    @papercraftcynder5430 11 місяців тому +310

    Learning how to improvise for jazz taught me more about music theory than AP Music Theory. The way chords are identified and labeled has helped me with everything from understanding Claude Debussy to transcribing my favorite pieces from video games. Like any other form of theory, it's just a tool, and it might not work for everything.
    Anyway looks like I've got some music theory channels to check out. I've been looking to learn more about non-eurocentric styles of music ever since I got a taste of their structures.

    • @LuckyPoop
      @LuckyPoop 9 місяців тому

      Jazz does suck and so does this racist video.

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle 5 місяців тому +12

      This politicizing of this issue strikes me as petty cultural jealousy. European civilization found ways of making things work systematically, and though the systems that resulted were not perfect, they at least established that such systems were possible. Aristotle invented logic (with some guidance from Socratic dialogues), and established that there were structures of thought that just didn't fly and weren't valid (there are no true contradictions). Newton "invented" gravity, that is, he invented the isolation of gravitational force as a conceptually distinct entity (which it is not as it exists in the real world), so he could mathematize it, though his frequent references to gravity as a "property of matter" (and hence inherent in matter) showed some awareness that he was erecting an artificial framework for the sake of rendering something existentially ambiguous into a more intelligible form. Rene Descartes "discovered" subjectivity, at least in terms of a way of articulating subjective aspects of human experience in a way that later thinkers could sink their teeth into. (Unfortunately he opened up a can of worms that has led to today's intellectual dark age of postmodernism, with solutions yet to be found, that has led to the proliferation of anti-truth ideologies like feminist theory and critical race theory, among others).
      -- Mathematics is more multi-sourced, with major accomplishments coming from India, the Muslim world, and Europe. And STILL, postmodernist morons push the idea that the field needs to be "de-colonized."
      -- Some ideologies are just crappy ideologies that amount to intellectual infantilization. The politicization of music theory as a tool of white supremacy falls into this category.

    • @papercraftcynder5430
      @papercraftcynder5430 5 місяців тому +26

      @@grizzlygrizzle I'm afraid I don't understand what my personal experience with using jazz theory to understand music and being open to listening to all kinds of music has to do with the "politicizing of this issue."

    • @grizzlygrizzle
      @grizzlygrizzle 5 місяців тому +3

      @@papercraftcynder5430 -- UA-cam generally suppresses the comments I post, so I stick them in the replies instead. Sometimes it's hard to find a comment to reply to that is directly appropriate. I was replying to the video.

    • @papercraftcynder5430
      @papercraftcynder5430 5 місяців тому +11

      @@grizzlygrizzle Usually UA-cam comments are sorted chronologically. The number of likes might also play into it, too, so it's not UA-cam deliberately suppressing your comments. Like with your reply to my comment, you probably just find the videos long after they've been posted, so your comments end up near the bottom because they're more recent, and because most people watch a video within the first day or so after it's been posted, you also miss the surge of people who could potentially give your comments the likes that could have pushed it closer to the top.

  • @Wyatt42069
    @Wyatt42069 3 роки тому +6742

    I'm a guitar player, and this is a great excuse for me to continue the guitar player tradition of not learning stuff

    • @TheRayvin6
      @TheRayvin6 3 роки тому +691

      No let’s just make our own music theory of 0-3-5 and bendy notes

    • @mrbungle3310
      @mrbungle3310 3 роки тому +218

      Im more of a metal/rock guy,made a full song in Japanese scales (Joshi Iwato) Why? Because idk its weird and cool
      Basically today u have everything its not fun to just play scales and notes fast,we miss creativity and passion

    • @thomaswhite3059
      @thomaswhite3059 3 роки тому +157

      Ah, so anarchists are the guitar players of leftist ideology.
      I'M STRONG IN MY CONTINUATION TO LEARN NOTHING!

    • @TheeRocker
      @TheeRocker 3 роки тому +43

      @@thomaswhite3059 the far left is spewing from this attempt to explain "why?". White people could read and write. We know the past, but don't blame the past on us in the presence.

    • @AI-jl5kp
      @AI-jl5kp 3 роки тому +326

      @@TheeRocker You could easily just write 'I didnt watch the video'

  • @ichigo11220
    @ichigo11220 Рік тому +2126

    I'm so glad you specified NORTH Indian music. Lot of people aren't aware of the stark difference of cultures throughout all India and Asia!

    • @ajs787
      @ajs787 Рік тому +72

      No kidding. As an example, Middle Eastern music has nothing to do with the music of Japan, which has very little to do with the music of India, which is different from Mongolian music, and it all encompasses Asia. There's a literal world of music out there that we now have access to.

    • @catherine6427
      @catherine6427 Рік тому +31

      He kinda generalized Africa though ':D not sure if there is a reason for that or not
      Anyway, i don't wanna be a nit picker, this video is asesome and informative and i wanna go talk to my old music teacher now

    • @ajs787
      @ajs787 Рік тому +48

      @@catherine6427 Probably because it's a specific subset of west African music that made its way to the United States, and going over all of it just in that region would be a video of its own.

    • @paveantelic7876
      @paveantelic7876 Рік тому

      yep, including adam and the other guy. they really like to gush over musics and cultures they know nothing about

    • @sloancostella2772
      @sloancostella2772 Рік тому

      So then, how about whenever TODAY’S MODERN MEDIA extols some big contemporary BLACK music figure like Michael “King of Pop” Jackson or Aretha Franklin or Beyonce or Whitney Houston or Tupac Shakir or Stevie Wonder or Little Richard or Snoop Dawg or Gladys Night or Diana Ross or James Brown? .. . THEN are THEY promoting BLACK “supremacy”.

  • @joshuadaviddavis
    @joshuadaviddavis 10 місяців тому +468

    This is touchy
    I spent some intimate time learning what we all generally call “music theory,” and I have grown to love it. But I love your new name for it (the harmonic style of 18th century European musicians). That’s accurate and helps to place it as its own individual contribution to music as a whole. Truly there has been so much development in music around the world, and sadly many of us didn’t study those contributions and styles ☹️

    • @masterofpuppers7963
      @masterofpuppers7963 10 місяців тому +20

      How is it touchy?
      Is there another transcription system that works better than Western Tonal Harmony for sharing ideas across time and distance for the widest range of instruments and styles?

    • @joshuadaviddavis
      @joshuadaviddavis 10 місяців тому +18

      @@masterofpuppers7963 I here that. It’s a well-developed system that clearly still influences a lot of music today. I guess really I’m just lamenting how little we learned as whole about other music development elsewhere. But you’re right, the theory we studied of how European composers handled harmony is great and super applicable

    • @masterofpuppers7963
      @masterofpuppers7963 10 місяців тому +13

      @@joshuadaviddavis Well, good news for you then. There's nothing to lament. It's just a system of measurement and recording. It doesn't influence music, how you and I use it does. It's just a toolbox. Now if you want to go learn more about raag or Tibetan polyphonic chanting or shakuhachi solos, get all the way after it.

    • @micayahritchie7158
      @micayahritchie7158 9 місяців тому +23

      ​@@masterofpuppers7963Ever consider that its that way not because it's inherently better but because it's creators have put themselves in the context of social hegemony ?

    • @masterofpuppers7963
      @masterofpuppers7963 9 місяців тому +13

      @@micayahritchie7158 No, because that would be making excuses to whine about nothing. Just like I don't make excuses to whine about Imperial Standard vs. Metric because I'm not Roman or French. I just use whatever system is appropriate for the box of wrenches I'm using. If I'm reading or writing for piano or guitar, I use the Tonal Harmony system. If I wanted to learn to play tabla, I'd use the raag system. Simple as.

  • @gregdyes659
    @gregdyes659 10 місяців тому +253

    While I have been a great admirer of your channel for several years and have been inspired by your insights into music, I have not been compelled to express by admiration of your work until viewing this video. I am a black man, with a doctorate in music composition, who taught jazz theory and improvisation over twenty years ago at an "illustrious" institution that only with great trepidation indulged my passions. I say trepidation, but also great resistance to changes in music curriculum that I represented and which most of my colleagues viewed as unfortunately necessary. Viewing your video brought back some pain and anguish that I thought I had "gotten over," but it would seem had only repressed. Alas, that I didn't have the presence of mind and the calmness of spirit to express back then what you have done with such passion and aplomb. I salute you!

    • @LuckyPoop
      @LuckyPoop 9 місяців тому +1

      Jazz does suck and so does this racist video.

    • @aag3752
      @aag3752 4 місяці тому

      Don't be a an absolute d*nce. Jazz couldn't exist today without the bedrock of European harmony that it was built on. There's nothing to rebel over when it comes to teaching the foundations of our music. This video is an embarrassment. Be smarter than him at least, Mr. "I have a doctorate."

    • @morejazzplz5746
      @morejazzplz5746 3 місяці тому

      did you just have a stroke mid racist tirade?@@wearethewearethewearethhe

    • @wearethewearethewearethhe
      @wearethewearethewearethhe 3 місяці тому

      @@morejazzplz5746 I don’t think I had a stroke. I think you saw those two sentences and your brainwashed mind got triggered. Then, you had to come up with some sort of story; anything that would make you feel like you are superior. So I guess the story your mind generated was that I had a stroke…..Enjoy not having a working brain.

  • @metallica3604
    @metallica3604 Рік тому +2609

    Hi, I am an Indian. While it's nice to see you highlighting the fact that we have our own theory and a very elaborate grammer divided into multiple scriptures. I would also like to point out that our music theory doesn't do harmony very well. It's mostly about the mood of the melody. Raag's even have their own catchy tune written inside the raag. But for an outsider trying to learn western music the traditional method did provide a good framework (credit where it's due). Also I can't fathom the fact that people actually believe that there is only one music theory.

    • @jamieapeck
      @jamieapeck Рік тому +58

      I dont think its that people think there is only one type of music theory, but in western culture it is the most relevant to us (not to say Indian music isnt relevant) but for me as a white westerner i will mostly play white music with the exception of a few African American artists from the 40s/50s

    • @nunyadambidniss
      @nunyadambidniss Рік тому +82

      @@jamieapeck Yeah &That DOES NOT make you a "White Supremacist" either.

    • @animafanfall
      @animafanfall Рік тому

      There are literally older comments that are shocked by the idea. I think your comment is also misleading, because nowhere does Adam say that you shouldn't use Western Music Theory, only that you shouldn't ONLY use Western Music Theory. (And as he mentioned, it isn't even the only Western Music Theory made). But official schools and idiots like Ben Shapiro act like there is only one type of theory, made by people 300 years ago in a small part of Europe, that applies to everything.

    • @macescoolchannel
      @macescoolchannel Рік тому +243

      @@nunyadambidniss And no one is saying that it does. But that's beside the point.
      I am south american, our musical history is deeply culturally mixed, we've got african, middle-eastern and european styles mixed with our own indigenous styles. And even with that rich culture AND an enormous interest in music, I've never even thought about the existence of a music theory other than the european one - why's that? Think, why in all of our history is the european way of analysing music the only one widely known?
      That is the supremacy part.

    • @ForageGardener
      @ForageGardener Рік тому +14

      @@jamieapeck yeah it's western music theory for typical western instruments

  • @KazKasozi
    @KazKasozi 3 роки тому +2811

    In Uganda we don't really have a word equivalent to "music". Rather music is defined by how one dances to it. Studying it therefore invariably means studying the dances.

    • @TheGamer2336
      @TheGamer2336 3 роки тому +35

      pretty cool!! i like that.

    • @nicholasrich5775
      @nicholasrich5775 3 роки тому +25

      @@fast1nakus he's literally just a troll with nothing better to do with his life lmao

    • @oops6876
      @oops6876 3 роки тому +23

      Supreme LC bro just shut up and change your diaper already

    • @fugithegreat
      @fugithegreat 3 роки тому +9

      That is so cool that the dance aspect is so entwined in the very concept of music. Now I want to learn more about Ugandan music!

    • @pinksnake8001
      @pinksnake8001 3 роки тому +4

      Amazing. I wish it was more like that in Europe.

  • @Siskos-pn7nd
    @Siskos-pn7nd 4 місяці тому +114

    I am 77yo, played by ear most of my life, but decided to learn music theory since everyone said this was a must know for song writers like me. Jazz was my main inspiration because being able to improvise is what motivated me to play for over 60 years. Music theory is not bad, but it does limit your music to a European based music. I like all kinds of world music because music they sound nice and do not stick to western rules.

    • @shrekiscool4743
      @shrekiscool4743 4 місяці тому +2

      This

    • @eliasabbas8450
      @eliasabbas8450 4 місяці тому +4

      I disagree. It is true that most people who will teach you music theory will often use western musical ideas to communicate the information relevant to what you're learning, but music theory itself and its concepts remain what they were always meant to be. A tool to codify and communicate musical ideas. If you can learn to codify and connect the sounds of a particular musical genre or culture to the appropriate concepts and notations present in music theory, then you will be very able to effectively use music theory to compose and play any type of music. The sounds have always existed. Creating a language around them did not change that. Every person, including you, playing any type of music has their own version of music theory. Their own set of concepts and ideas which they turn to when they need to navigate with their instrument.
      Note that I do not deny the fact that the way we learn music theory, as well as the way we teach it, influences the way we and others play. My point is strictly that music theory itself does not do that to you.

    • @Samuri_Jack_Enjoyer
      @Samuri_Jack_Enjoyer 4 місяці тому +5

      jazz literally uses western music theory. jazz originated from americans trying to imitate classical music, thats how we got ragtime. Also the western european music theory is very versatile, you just have to learn the rules before you break them.

    • @Ha-uu4bm
      @Ha-uu4bm 3 місяці тому +2

      may i ask how did you learn to play by ear without music theory?

  • @vanderaudioworks
    @vanderaudioworks 8 місяців тому +75

    I feel very lucky that in my school (Higher School for the Arts, department Music and Technology, Netherlands) we are being taught "music theory" in a different way. I started last year, about to start the second. I had a significant basis in understanding western harmony and had trained my ears passionately. When we started going to these theory classes, I was surprised to see that we were not only going over the origins of western theory (think Gregorian singing, unison, that kind of thing), but also traditional Indonesian instruments, composing with it, playing it, and even synthesizing it to make it playable with al the weird temperaments included. Furthermore Balkan music, clave rhythms, Jamaican and Caribbean rhythmic composition made the rounds and it felt new and refreshing, comparing what I already knew and understood about western music to this new thing I hadn't heard of before.
    Edit: "... with all the weird temperaments..." is not the right thing to say.
    Let's change it to "... with all these - in western - uncommon temperaments

    • @jas_bataille
      @jas_bataille 6 місяців тому

      Where and how to I sign up

    • @StoicDivinity
      @StoicDivinity 4 місяці тому +2

      That's so gay lol

    • @chosenone-cs9vm
      @chosenone-cs9vm 4 місяці тому +2

      @@StoicDivinityif god invented gay people I’d starting praising him

    • @StoicDivinity
      @StoicDivinity 4 місяці тому

      @@chosenone-cs9vm God created people, he didn't "invent" them. He didn't create gay people, he created people, everyone is born with their own sin, it's up to the individual to renounce their worldly (material, fleshly, base etc) desire / will, in favor of the Divine Will of God.
      Crazy you don't understand nuance.

  • @maxfliegner4122
    @maxfliegner4122 3 роки тому +6490

    Adam, I would definitely pay top dollar to see you debate Ben Shapiro’s MUSIC THEORIST father who went to music school.

    • @zg4705
      @zg4705 3 роки тому +319

      It wouldn't be a debate. It would be a murder.

    • @kingloser4198
      @kingloser4198 3 роки тому +170

      It would only work if Ben's Grandfather was there... "My dad said..."

    • @maxfliegner4122
      @maxfliegner4122 3 роки тому +353

      mUsiC hAs 3 eLemEntS: hArmOny, RhyThm anD MelOdy Rap OnLy sAtiSfieS 2 of tHeM

    • @pessim1st681
      @pessim1st681 3 роки тому +79

      To be fair rap definitely requires the least talent next to pop

    • @SubNorm4L
      @SubNorm4L 3 роки тому +387

      @@pessim1st681 Yeah? Try to rap.
      You can't

  • @user-iy9uk3rm1o
    @user-iy9uk3rm1o 2 роки тому +1916

    I didn’t even think that there are other “musical theories” but now I don’t understand why such an obvious thought has never came in my mind

    • @RT710.
      @RT710. 2 роки тому +75

      EXACTLY! Why have I never second guessed this?!

    • @willbephore3086
      @willbephore3086 2 роки тому +2

      Just one more bit of evidence on how a supremacist culture actually works - by eliminating options, even from the thinking of intelligent people.

    • @AndarilhoMarco
      @AndarilhoMarco 2 роки тому +88

      Exactly. It just happens that the most used one in music industry is european (mostly italian and german) music theory, but each ethnic group has some level of music theory, and some are very advanced like indian music theory or chinese music theory.

    • @ProvenScroll
      @ProvenScroll 2 роки тому +99

      I honestly thought music theory was like math before this video, that being that it is constant across cultures. Now I know how wrong I was :/

    • @jokubass4718
      @jokubass4718 2 роки тому

      @@ProvenScroll You're so easy to convince, that's a sign of dumbness

  • @leobatuki2949
    @leobatuki2949 4 місяці тому +7

    Just watched it, and it's still up to date. Great job !

  • @scipio7
    @scipio7 10 місяців тому +98

    I remember learning music theory in high school. It was interesting because somehow they taught me that figured bass was antiquated and not worth learning until college, if at all. BUT somehow when I wrote a piece for an exercise that resolved from a V7 to a IV to a I, I was wrong because that couldn't happen. Except, of course that I had learned it from blues and blues-based rock, where it's the most common resolution. In other words, traditional music theory doesn't even explain blues and classic rock very well (even ignoring neutral 3rds and 7ths). And forget about explaining something as harmonically sophisticated as bop or modern jazz. How can it be universal?

    • @crtusr
      @crtusr 5 місяців тому +1

      But if you do V7 IV6 IV I, it should be "legal" and you can argue that it is for it to sound more religious, heh

  • @roelofvandermerwe1147
    @roelofvandermerwe1147 3 роки тому +892

    "Western Classical Music theory". That's what it's called here in South Africa, there is clear line here say between, cape jazz theory, and western classical theory

    • @billpeel4408
      @billpeel4408 3 роки тому +76

      That's pretty good, I think, because it doesn't simply replace "Western classical music" with "music"

    • @My_Legs_Are_OK
      @My_Legs_Are_OK 3 роки тому +35

      Problem solved, lol.

    • @roelofvandermerwe1147
      @roelofvandermerwe1147 3 роки тому +28

      @@billpeel4408 yeah no of course. When I started my degree (in 18th century European music theory😂) there was alot of heavy focus in the first year of our Musicology module on thinking outward about musical interpretation down to the tiniest pieces of information. And it was made perfectly evident that "music theory" is a euro-centric term, just as "World" music is a heavily Western biased ideology, amongst other topics

    • @trevor8764
      @trevor8764 3 роки тому +11

      Its the same in Kenya.

    • @anuel3780
      @anuel3780 3 роки тому +6

      ayooo this is literally what i used as a replacement as well, good to hear other South Africans having the same idea

  • @NahreSol
    @NahreSol 3 роки тому +6469

    I’m constantly perplexed by how you manage to cover ...several dissertation’s worth of material in each video. So awesome!!

    • @MarkFeng
      @MarkFeng 3 роки тому +53

      I love your channel Nahre! Nice to see you here😀

    • @martinpaddle
      @martinpaddle 3 роки тому +28

      beautiful playing!

    • @zxp3ct3r41
      @zxp3ct3r41 3 роки тому +10

      Adam is a Legend

    • @milosbar
      @milosbar 3 роки тому +14

      You’re one to talk Nahre! Big fan of your content and the way you approach it!

    • @xngr
      @xngr 3 роки тому +51

      Did you and Adam purposefully choose a piece for you to play that only uses white keys?

  • @ninab.4540
    @ninab.4540 10 місяців тому +106

    The fact that Chevalier got ignored by the music loving scene (even the figure skating one!) despite him being an aristocrat from royal France and being a legit composer is....very telling. I've always loved Chevalier, and seeing people discover him and his work through a long overdue movie is gratifying af lol

    • @thomasdupont7186
      @thomasdupont7186 5 місяців тому +2

      Saint Georges ? he was ignored in the US ? Because he was quiet popular in France (didn't saw the movie though).

    • @madtheorist1856
      @madtheorist1856 4 місяці тому

      ​@@thomasdupont7186yeah from an American culture war perspective, the story of Joseph Bologne is almost too perfect as a mixed race Renaissance man, contemporary of Bach, kept from positions of high esteem for purportedly racist reasons. Even tangentially tied into the French Revolution I think

    • @Samuri_Jack_Enjoyer
      @Samuri_Jack_Enjoyer 4 місяці тому +3

      cuz the movie was shitty looking. also in the fricking trailer they portray mozart as some uptight aristocrat which he was the opposite of and every classical music lover knows that.

    • @thomasdupont7186
      @thomasdupont7186 4 місяці тому

      @@madtheorist1856 Well yeah he was a high ranking soldier (a colonel I think) and a revolutionary first (for French historians at least but that's their problem I guess), he was born as a slave too. As well as a high level fencer, a enlightment enthusiast, a violinist virtuoso AND a recognized composer. And I do agree with you: that guy kicks ass regarding the context. Even if there is other cases of mixed race soldiers/artists during this period in France. There is parts of his life that stayed obscure to this day though.

    • @RebekahMaxner
      @RebekahMaxner 4 дні тому +1

      Calling him an aristocrat is a bit complicated, seeing as his status fell a bit after his white father passed away. He was born to an aristo dad and a slave mom who had a real and caring relationship -- very unusual for that day (both the racial and the caring parts). His life was wrought with not knowing where he belonged. He's a type of hero today (I love his story and his music), but he lived a tragic life and was discarded after the French Revolution. The movie about him is pretty good, except for the cringy first scene with Mozart.

  • @noble2122
    @noble2122 9 місяців тому +3

    i love this so much man, i did a school projecy on scott joplin in 4th grade and when i heard ragtime my first thought was “this was the inspiration for foundation of the beginning of american music” but i never saw it acknowledged, this is gracious

  • @queenofastora
    @queenofastora 3 роки тому +3882

    OGs remember when this video was titled "Music Theory is Racist"
    Edit: I don't want arguments about white genocide and scientific racism under a dumb and lazy comment I made in a less than a minute

    • @Knight_Astolfo
      @Knight_Astolfo 3 роки тому +149

      OG's also remember when Adam had a twitter
      kek

    • @michaelstrickland4935
      @michaelstrickland4935 3 роки тому +12

      @@Knight_Astolfo lol

    • @p.as.in.pterodactyl1024
      @p.as.in.pterodactyl1024 3 роки тому +101

      When I saw the title, I thought to myself "huh, I recently saw essentially the same video with a different title - I wonder if this is a follow-up."

    • @eyx9421
      @eyx9421 3 роки тому +60

      tbh i think the old name was catchier

    • @Tubluer
      @Tubluer 3 роки тому +349

      @@eyx9421 It was. It was also a blatantly false statement. You might as well claim the major scales are anti-Semitic. Now the title aims at the real target at least.

  • @LON009
    @LON009 3 роки тому +1820

    Adam: You can't dance to Bach's chorales
    Me: You haven't seen me drunk

    • @michalhoransky1214
      @michalhoransky1214 3 роки тому +82

      adam: you can't dance to Bach's chorales
      Hilary Hahn: crank up those moves old man

    • @zander9698
      @zander9698 3 роки тому +98

      I was an Uber driver and I once had a very drunk backseat passenger shout at me to CRANK IT UP!!! when I had classical radio on. It was very surreal.

    • @lerippletoe6893
      @lerippletoe6893 3 роки тому +15

      BWV 10 has me feeling some things let me tell you

    • @popoff7808
      @popoff7808 3 роки тому +31

      I can and do dance to EVERYTHING. The don't much like me at the Symphony these days.

    • @hhhieronymusbotch
      @hhhieronymusbotch 3 роки тому +9

      You: You haven't seen me drunk.
      Me: I haven't seen you drunk...yet.

  • @steveroberts3177
    @steveroberts3177 4 місяці тому +3

    Thank you! Years ago, my wife and I were driving in Ireland and listening to Irish National Radio. The DJ was playing some Duke Ellington and followed that up with Beethoven, and the lightbulb went on in my head - we in the U.S. have Jim Crow radio. I have been ranting about this to whoever would listen ever since. Most people think I'm crazy so thank you for putting this video together.

  • @Nerderkips
    @Nerderkips 4 місяці тому +10

    No way someone asked " does joel use music theory" you cannot NOT use music theory, making music IS music theory

  • @ronshirt
    @ronshirt 3 роки тому +1772

    “Works of art make rules, rules do not make works of art.” --Claude Debussy

    • @Varooooooom
      @Varooooooom 3 роки тому +31

      Perfect summary imo.

    • @KP3droflxp
      @KP3droflxp 3 роки тому +190

      @@kwyman986 I don't think you understood the comment

    • @RobyMBeki
      @RobyMBeki 3 роки тому +6

      And he was right

    • @Eyeballs9990
      @Eyeballs9990 3 роки тому +24

      Kevin i’d say many people don’t hold a degree in music...

    • @domingopartida5812
      @domingopartida5812 3 роки тому +1

      YaassSS

  • @zitnbit
    @zitnbit Рік тому +362

    Interesting. We in Korea learn three kind of music theory in a school. Classical music(old European), practical music(contemporary African American) and Korean traditional music.

    • @Peaceluvr18
      @Peaceluvr18 Рік тому +14

      Makes a lot of sense

    • @Heyu7her3
      @Heyu7her3 Рік тому +12

      VERY interesting

    • @studentoferror
      @studentoferror Рік тому +13

      That sounds incredibly well rounded.

    • @expilectakunai
      @expilectakunai Рік тому +7

      omg gimme your music theory class rn I neeeed more non-western music classes
      don't get me wrong, European composers slap, but lemme learn some Japanese folk songs and pentatonic scales pls

    • @bacarolle
      @bacarolle Рік тому +11

      That explains a lot of K-pop lol

  • @jas_bataille
    @jas_bataille 6 місяців тому +4

    I was fortunate enough to be trained in acting, dancing and music and I never really got what the huge differences between those three things was. Each requires rhythm; each requires a deep understanding of emotions; each requires harmony between multiple parts, each is a form of storytelling, and each is a performance art! I'm always dumbfounded when people go, "oh wow! That's really incredible. You have so many talents!" to me, growing up, they were kind of the same. I was never good at music school because I couldn't separate them. I would sing, dance, all the time. I could not understand how other students were making music if not by living it through your body as much as possible!

  • @sebastian_koenig
    @sebastian_koenig 7 місяців тому +4

    This was surprisingly eye-opening. Thank you!

  • @theautisticguitarist7560
    @theautisticguitarist7560 3 роки тому +730

    "You can have the pentatonic scale without the bending."
    *blues has left the chat.*

    • @gustavomelles1
      @gustavomelles1 3 роки тому +19

      Pentatonic without bending should a crime lol.

    • @Tsharkeye
      @Tsharkeye 3 роки тому +20

      Pianists can't bend notes xD

    • @grusha9516
      @grusha9516 3 роки тому +50

      @@Tsharkeye just bend the piano

    • @stephendonovan9084
      @stephendonovan9084 3 роки тому +1

      Thomas van der Burg Well yeah, but that’s why they do turns right?

    • @thedeviousduck8027
      @thedeviousduck8027 3 роки тому +2

      @@Tsharkeye wanna bet?

  • @8stormy5
    @8stormy5 2 роки тому +889

    I took AP music theory in high school, and my awesome teacher always made it clear that "AP music theory" was one approach to music and that outside the confines of the course, the rules of 18th century baroque and classical did not apply to "all" "music" (both in quotes because each word in the term is loaded). Lead to me filling my uni's diversity credits by taking classes on American music and non-Anglo world music, and while I'm a very amateur hobbyist I noticeably write better music because of it.

    • @xcyoteex
      @xcyoteex 2 роки тому +18

      So, you're saying that musical education isn't racist and this video is just a racist screed.

    • @user-dg3ug7ny5d
      @user-dg3ug7ny5d 2 роки тому +9

      Not from the US, but I was going to take our "AP music theory" course after 4 years on a music scholarship. I believe the only genre studied in the main course was classical, and for two years, at that. There was a similar course that was Jazz/Blues-focused, but my primary instrument was flute, so I was directed into the 'classical' course, instead. So glad I didn't waste my time on it and chose Biology instead. Although, the racial ideologies in music only just followed me in the form of Charles Darwin instead, and the many other "enlightened" of the 19th century.

    • @evann5900
      @evann5900 2 роки тому +67

      @@xcyoteex ???

    • @catholicdad
      @catholicdad 2 роки тому +4

      I had AP Music too--what a waste! It did get me college credit however. Money well spent.

    • @jacobbau8328
      @jacobbau8328 2 роки тому

      @@xcyoteex the fuck are you saying lol. Just because there is one example of progress doesn't mean "ohp, the problem actually isn't real, stop making shit up video >:("

  • @floop_the_pigs2840
    @floop_the_pigs2840 4 місяці тому +157

    "Beethoven was an above average composer"
    Understatement of the century

    • @emo-sup-sock
      @emo-sup-sock 4 місяці тому +8

      that's the joke

    • @adamkingry6862
      @adamkingry6862 4 місяці тому

      The speaker is a radical ideologue trying to shoehorn his personal biases into the well-established structure and logic of music. This is precisely the reason this sort of nonsense is damaging to progress. Trying to artificially construct an alternate reality only results in confusion, dysfunction, and the deterioration of academia. You cannot relegate Beethoven to B- status without eroding music education.

    • @hadronoftheseus8829
      @hadronoftheseus8829 4 місяці тому +36

      @@emo-sup-sock It's not a joke, the guy is just not very bright.

    • @thesovietunion9542
      @thesovietunion9542 4 місяці тому +9

      Facts, if you know the lore behind some of his later pieces (or have even listened to them), it’s honestly just amazing that he was able to accomplish all that shit while either nearly or completely deaf.

    • @joffrelindemann
      @joffrelindemann 4 місяці тому +11

      Interesting... A Shame the woke approach

  • @joshuachang5210
    @joshuachang5210 2 місяці тому +7

    6:46 wait until Adam finds out how mandarin taught in Taiwanese high schools keep using thousands of years old text as teaching material

  • @ScuzzyForPrez
    @ScuzzyForPrez 3 роки тому +3172

    I die laughing every time I hear Ben say "my music theorist father, who went to music school."

    • @joshuabroyles7565
      @joshuabroyles7565 3 роки тому +196

      "I'm not a charlatan, but I play one on the internet."

    • @impish_snake3526
      @impish_snake3526 3 роки тому +192

      “Well, I understand better than anyone that music is taught by music in the music of music at music.”

    • @joshuabroyles7565
      @joshuabroyles7565 3 роки тому +189

      @@impish_snake3526 To be fair, though, while some nominal majority of music scholars with more advanced academic qualifications than Ben Shapiro's dad would probably be compelled to disagreee with Ben Shapiro's dad, Ben Shapiro does have a point: none of those people is also Ben Shapiro's dad.

    • @impish_snake3526
      @impish_snake3526 3 роки тому +20

      @@joshuabroyles7565 True enough.

    • @ernestdayne6711
      @ernestdayne6711 3 роки тому +3

      What does that mean?

  • @shayneoneill1506
    @shayneoneill1506 2 роки тому +2088

    I remember stumbling across the limitations of western theory when an Persian guy tried to commission me to write some iranian-style music for his film (that sadly never got made, couldnt get funding to move out of preproduction) and I thought "OK this is a challenge, I'll try" (Also, this was well before the current popular understanding of appropriation, it just wasnt on the radar) , and after about 3 weeks I had to call him and cancel out. Other than his fairly specfic requirement of the style of Iranian from a village in the north his famly comes from, the theory is just lightyears away from ours. The microtonal adjustments required to replicate the scales was fine, but the rest was absolutely alien to me. I found out there was a Turkish professor who specialized in "middle east music" at the conservatorium so I made an appointment with him and he just straight up said "Dont do it. *I* wouldn't attempt it and I learned my theory in the country next door to Iran." He pointed out that even within Iran, a person from one area would be learning completely different styles and rules to a guy in a village 100km away. Even more, musicologists have actually struggled to understand the persian music families in any sort of analyical framework that can be translated into english concepts. Even saying whats *different* has proved a struggle. So a 20yo amateur composer with no experience of Iranian music outside of cab driver radios had no chance. I mean I could have faked it and come up with something that sounded to ME like "Iranian music", but anyone from that region would have found it offensive, or at best embarassing, and I just dont wanna be THAT guy. My turkish contact gave me a contact for an actual Iranian composer which I forwarded onto my guy.
    And I think this is all excellent ,because its a reminder that music is a language, and languages are always historically and spatially practices, filled with excesses of meaning and filled with implication, explicit and implicit. All of which is part of why music has been such a powerful expression of the human condition.

    • @sloancostella2772
      @sloancostella2772 2 роки тому +19

      So then, how about whenever the TODAY’S MODERN MEDIA extols some big contemporary BLACK music figure like Michael “King of Pop” Jackson or Aretha Franklin or Beyonce or Whitney Houston or Tupac Shakir or Stevie Wonder or Little Richard or Snoop Dawg or Gladys Night or Diana Ross or James Brown? .. . THEN are THEY promoting BLACK “supremacy”.

    • @revisit8480
      @revisit8480 2 роки тому +13

      @Shayne
      Well, obviously you didn't study hard enough to learn about everything there is to know, and you didn't acquire wisdom beyond human comprehension.
      In the meantime there shouldn't be a "music theory" book, on the basics from Europe, about "very specific persian village music from a village located beyond the giant rock shaped like a priests hat, when the wind blows 20° off towards the west".
      You know you sound like nutcases, when you talk about this, right? They teach EUROPEAN music in white countries. Unbelievable, I know, but hear me out: "You go to Persia / Iran to learn about persian music".
      But go figure: People can write books. Imagine that: books. Could you write one, maybe, and stop this whining?

    • @richardburton5706
      @richardburton5706 2 роки тому +37

      @@sloancostella2772 This was the slippery slope that shone out from the video, at some point extolling any one music type comes to be seen as disproportionately favoring that one type, at the expense of any other. It's the same problem even a kind and empathetic parent has if they don't manage to deal out their kindness and generosity equitably among the kids. Moreover, isn't it precisely through such extolling/favoring that each type of music rose to such preeminence that it became integral to, and emblematic of, its particular culture/sub-culture in the first place?
      In a similar vein, oughtn't the very good point about the limited reliability of Wikipedia, given the even more unreliable and considerably more limited sources available to anyone living centuries ago (including you and me, if we'd been there) to have been put forward as precisely the reason why these historical figures should be cut considerable slack?
      We are all privileged to be granted a world view through the internet, more then a hundred years of recorded music- most of it available free online, to say nothing of the passports, visas, prosperity, plastic money, wide-bodied-jet affordability of travel etc that have better informed our views.
      Irrespective of any supremacist or relativist notion, the bigger question , I suggest is, to what extent your culture and exposure to its music inadvertently either enables or constrains your capacity to appreciate music conceived in a different cultural milieu? One glance through any UA-cam comments thread confirms that, although music is often vaunted as a universal language, "It 'aint necessarily so".

    • @sloancostella2772
      @sloancostella2772 2 роки тому

      @@ext274 duuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

    • @eel9
      @eel9 2 роки тому +35

      ​@@sloancostella2772 Watch the video- saying that black music is popular doesn't disagree with it, it furthers its point

  • @josephcruz669
    @josephcruz669 10 місяців тому +7

    I’m proud to say I was taught to think for myself as a music major at Cal State Dominguez Hills in Carson, CA. I learned so much there that I have used in my life; whether it musical or not. I learned the foundation of many theorys of music, and most importantly that it was simply just that; a theory. Or a way of understanding these noises we make with our voices and other devices (instruments). It’s all just sound pressure waves that we can translate into anything. The most important thing is how we connect them together to convey what we are trying to express. The rules of how we notate or understand are just guidelines of something much bigger and clearly not tangible. This is my “theory” of why certain people chose to make music more universal. Because innately there is something more universal and primal about it. Something uniquely human.

  • @erikibbett3206
    @erikibbett3206 4 місяці тому

    God bless you for making this video ... the algorithm has sent you my way a few times, and your content is always terrific. I was pleasantly surprised to see the depth of your cross-disciplinary acuity, here.

  • @spacebunsarah
    @spacebunsarah 3 роки тому +2044

    The most important thing I ever learned about music theory is that "if it sounds good, and theory says it is wrong, then the theory is wrong."

    • @theangel666100
      @theangel666100 3 роки тому +259

      @@kuruptlive8874 you've misunderstood the use of the word theory

    • @themoosemooseV2
      @themoosemooseV2 3 роки тому +73

      ​@@kuruptlive8874 Right! I think one of the main points of the video is that theory never stops changing. So why then do our educational theory books still revolve around one sect of one culture from one era of music? Awesome to hear that a lot of your theory teachers use more modern and diverse examples to teach theory btw.

    • @martinmorales3195
      @martinmorales3195 3 роки тому +36

      @@kuruptlive8874 You still don't understand what the word theory means in this context. A Theory is just a set of organized ideas used to explain something. So, music theory explains how music works.
      You're are confusing the word theory with the words hypothesis or conjecture.

    • @sativares
      @sativares 3 роки тому +41

      Theory is describing the building blocks for you to create what ever fuck you want.
      Like you learn about wood, nails, hammer and a simple blueprint to practice on. When you know how the tools works and what the material is for you can build what ever fuck you want.
      If you wanna build something ugly, you build something ugly. If you wanna build something beautiful, you build something beautiful. If you wanna build something crazy, you build something crazy.
      For instance, theory doesn't urge you to follow the exact layout of a structure. You are free to modify it in your unique way. But you need to have something to start practise on and theory gives some examples of some nice working structures for you to work with.
      Only an idiot thinks that you cannot create something outside the working frame of this theory.
      Like if you go to a construction school and you learn how to build a simple house. That doesn't mean that you are not allowed to build something different or something that doesn't even resemble an house. That isn't what theory is all about.
      You learn how to use the tools to build after a simple blueprint. Now you are free to create what ever fuck you want. That is what theory is for. Now you have to be creative. And if you find something that works which the theory didn't cover - thats great! Maybe they will add it to the theory.

    • @wi1dcard192
      @wi1dcard192 3 роки тому +15

      Once you learn the rules you learn the best ways to break them ;)

  • @EvelynnEleonore
    @EvelynnEleonore 3 роки тому +958

    12:12 "...and rarely performed after his death" im sorry but it took my brain a moment to realize that you meant his MUSIC was rarely performed. It sounded to me like you were saying HE rarely performed after his death, which, in fairness, is the case for most musicians,

    • @1974UTuber
      @1974UTuber 3 роки тому +14

      lol Phew I thought I was the only one who made that error

    • @Reydriel
      @Reydriel 3 роки тому +39

      That would be one hell of a performance

    • @warnergrantham3019
      @warnergrantham3019 3 роки тому +31

      A Tupac-esque hologram show with Bach would be sick

    • @xjesusxchristx
      @xjesusxchristx 3 роки тому +9

      @@warnergrantham3019 Bach featuring Eddie van Halen

    • @jonnyso1
      @jonnyso1 3 роки тому +4

      The only musician to play after death was Michael Jackson, of course.

  • @rainbowchewynuggets
    @rainbowchewynuggets 9 місяців тому +3

    I’ve actually been interested in better understanding the structure/language of music for a while now. Having seen this, I think I’ll look beyond the usual western “music theory”. Thanks for the tip and all the insightful info. :)

  • @edenoliver2005
    @edenoliver2005 5 місяців тому +4

    im currently studying the harmonic style of 18th century european composers at a community college with that as my major and i was honestly really disappointed when i started and realized all they wanted us to do was classical music. i was trained as a rock/metal singer and it really does not work with my style at all which i find so frustrating. i also really hate all these music "rules" and have been trying to break as many as i can writing my own music lol. great video! really made me think.

  • @surrealistidealist
    @surrealistidealist 3 роки тому +2749

    The best music genre and tradition, in my opinion, is Tony Hawk's Pro Skater & Underground soundtrack.

    • @juanbotero4154
      @juanbotero4154 3 роки тому +94

      True unity has been found

    • @christiankale7817
      @christiankale7817 3 роки тому +7

      bahahahaha yessssss

    • @GioAndollo
      @GioAndollo 3 роки тому +8

      Goldfinger and the Vandals forever!

    • @surrealistidealist
      @surrealistidealist 3 роки тому +53

      @Sergeant NPC Well, it's something that white and non-white people enjoy together, and we can't have that, because then we'd all recognize our common interests and start calling for a wealth tax, the cancelation of student and medical debt, campaign finance reform, a breakup of the big media monopolies and tech companies, and then, worst of all, an end to endless wars and illegal military interventions.

    • @edthewave
      @edthewave 3 роки тому +33

      Honorable mention: Jet Set Radio

  • @frejahogemark7397
    @frejahogemark7397 3 роки тому +633

    In my swedish middle school which specialised in choir music, we were taught that we shouldn't say "classical music" but instead we should say "västerländsk konstmusik" which translates to "western musical arts" or "western art music". Our choir teacher made it very clear that what we were learning was only but the tip of the iceberg of the great wide world of music.

    • @ryanjames891
      @ryanjames891 3 роки тому

      do you share swedish and english as a first language?

    • @popsutu1257
      @popsutu1257 3 роки тому +32

      Your choir theacher lied. You must have been disapointed when you found it was the major part of the iceberg.

    • @GabrielaCuelloTorres
      @GabrielaCuelloTorres 3 роки тому +10

      Gotta love Sweden.

    • @Oelov
      @Oelov 3 роки тому +3

      Helt rätt av lärarna :) var/när gick du?

    • @vscitizen
      @vscitizen 3 роки тому +38

      In france we were told to call it "musique savante occidentale", which means "Occidental intellectual music", and some teacher strongly repeated that it's only a part of what music totally is, but sadly only a few did this. Many had a very closed mind set about what music is, kinda in a Ben Shapiro way of seeing it

  • @liamstacey419
    @liamstacey419 5 місяців тому +10

    We use Music both as a form of community cohesion, such as dance, music, or music that tells a story, but also as a serious art form in which the listener is challenged and surprised, and taken on a new adventure. It is the second form that “rules“ are frequently broken, and the structure of the music is opened up into new areas.
    2. There is more than just rhythm and chord, progression and tone. There is also the space that arrest can take up.; There’s consistency of style and intentional lack there of.; references to other musical styles and individual songs, etc. and I’m sure there are more elements than I can think of.
    3. Western 16 -18 century music of the court (and possibly other traditions) was often a civilized rendition of folk tunes, some of which came from Hungarian or Spanish gypsies, folk music, and probably other influences, giving evidence to the idea that this music was classist at the very least.

    • @sagvjc2525
      @sagvjc2525 2 місяці тому

      Let me shorten your comment
      "Im fine with racist musical ideology"

    • @liamstacey419
      @liamstacey419 2 місяці тому +1

      @@sagvjc2525 your comment tells me that you didn’t read my comment. The difference between a critique and an insult is that critique provides reasoning, while the insult is a string of words that are intended to attack the emotions. Please consider rereading my comment. An open mind can grow, not enclosed mind.

  • @dczvxi6634
    @dczvxi6634 9 місяців тому +5

    When he says "the harmonic style of 18th century musicians" he just completely skipped all Renaissance and Baroque music 💀

    • @AdamNeely
      @AdamNeely  9 місяців тому +14

      Renaissance music is not taught within the umbrella of “music theory”

    • @dczvxi6634
      @dczvxi6634 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@AdamNeelySome pieces by William Byrd do follow a system of tonality

    • @Elfenohr
      @Elfenohr 16 днів тому +1

      @@AdamNeelyHmm, when I studied musicology at university we learned all kinds of theories and approaches--including the Renaissance and the Middle Ages. That's why I was a bit confused with the video. I think what you meant is "the type of music theory you typically learn in high school"?
      Another big part of musicology is ethnomusicology/music anthropology, that studies music outside of Europe and folk music traditions within Europe. That's where we learned a bit about other music theories as well.

  • @leepenn2493
    @leepenn2493 3 роки тому +523

    It's not even "the harmonic style of 18th century European musicians" - it's more "the harmonic style of 18th century Western European musicians". There's a rich tradition in Greece, for instance, of Byzantine music theory which is wildly different to classical western music theory. The 8 modes of Byzantine chant (and however many sub-modes within them) express a broad and deep variability that I haven't seen mirrored in western music (though to be fair to western music, it seems to have converged on a tuning which allows for a lot of flexibility in the colour of the melodies).
    The Byzantine scale is one of 72 pitches (called Moria), and each mode and submode is a scale which uses a different set of 8 subdivisions of those pitches - for instance, the Plagal 2nd mode is divided among the 72 moria like this: 6-20-4-12-6-20-4. For some modes the subdivision changes depending on the directionality - you might flatten a particular note if you're going down in the scale. There are also particular runs and accents which are specific to a mode. In old Byzantine notation they would have a few symbols which indicate an entire run, though more contemporary notation tends to just write out the run explicitly. Byzantine notation is also quite cool; instead of expressing the note on an image of the entire scale, the notation tells you to move from the point you're at - so there's a symbol which means "go up 3" or "stay on the same note", etc. This has (I reckon) led to a different emphasis - Byzantine music tends to jump around the scale less than western music. Though this is likely also because it's a vocal music tradition, not an instrumental one.
    The influence of Byzantine (and Turkish theory on western theory can be seen in the more recent prominence of microtonal compositions - though even there, the way western composers use microtonality, in my experience, doesn't really mesh with eastern theory. Eastern microtonality still aims for that concordant feel of being within a certain scale, and we have the concepts which allow for that. The western microtonality that I've heard feels more discordant, as though the entire point is to move away from classic western tonality, and not necessarily to embrace the particular feel of a new tonality. But still, it's cool and I look forward to seeing the evolution of western microtonality. It's definitely an interesting variation on the classic western tuning which always has the same pitch subdivisions.

    • @emanuel_soundtrack
      @emanuel_soundtrack 3 роки тому +4

      they are so beautiful, that is why they influence so much the greatest composers

    • @jaykavanaugh8975
      @jaykavanaugh8975 3 роки тому +16

      Very interesting and illustrative that different musical traditions are made up of different raw material. Western music is bound by the equal tempered 12 tones and the study of music theory is understanding common practice in that particular system. It has no racial component except what humans ascribe to it.

    • @emanuel_soundtrack
      @emanuel_soundtrack 3 роки тому +1

      @@jaykavanaugh8975 exactly

    • @emanuel_soundtrack
      @emanuel_soundtrack 3 роки тому +6

      what desesperated hipocritical millenials socialists with iphone and widely monetized by youtube ascribe to it

    • @VictorNickel
      @VictorNickel 3 роки тому +1

      Microtonality is either: artificial, or natural, and if it's natural it's not microtones, simply mathematically correct tones
      The tempered western scale is nice to compose vertical brainy music and change tonalities, but that's about it.

  • @leonardlehrman7295
    @leonardlehrman7295 2 роки тому +227

    When I suggested that Schenker was valuable but "not the be-all-end-all," as this video also suggests, I was eliminated from consideration by Carl Schachter for a position on the Queens College music faculty. That was over 25 years ago. I guess I was ahead of my time, so to speak.

    • @prgxl
      @prgxl 2 роки тому +4

      Was Schenker really considered fundamental? Was it thought essential to understanding Bach-to-Brahms music in this country? In the 90's? Thought only Germans were that crazy.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx 2 роки тому +25

      @@prgxl Schenker has left a far bigger footprint in American academe than in Germany. In the US, I get the impression that Schenker has been the go-to theory for understanding and discussing classical composition until fairly recently; in Germany he has never been taken all that seriously; in Europe, the UK and Finland are really the only places where you will find much work in Schenkerian analysis being done.

    • @dntskdnttll
      @dntskdnttll 2 роки тому +4

      @@kospandx “in Europe, the UK and Finland”
      Europe is a broad group of places. Which countries or regions do you mean? Finland is one of them but where else?

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx 2 роки тому +18

      @@dntskdnttll Read as: in Europe, I am only aware of major Schenkerian research centres in Finland and the UK.

    • @xxjackirblackbloddxx7377
      @xxjackirblackbloddxx7377 2 роки тому +2

      this goes both ways, and ur gonna find other places where their cultures version not the be all end all will get you kicked out, welcome to humans, the west isnt special

  • @ethanberg3343
    @ethanberg3343 10 місяців тому +2

    In my Advanced Analysis class we supposedly were learning Schenkerian analysis, but to be honest, I did not learn anything nor do I care to now several years later. To me, music theory is about studying the elements and building blocks of any type of music, from any culture. That's how I was consistently taught in high school (I did not take AP Music Theory as it was not offered at the time) and in my college music theory classes. In high school music theory class we even had ethno-musicology units covering India, Middle East, Far East Asia, music from different parts of Africa, and South America.

  • @phwhitefly
    @phwhitefly 10 місяців тому

    Bravo Adam! My love for New Orleans music and tradition led me to pick up a bass guitar, that led me to your channel and that led me to this video. This awareness was like turning on a light bulb for me, It all makes prefect sense now.

  • @mikechatt
    @mikechatt 3 роки тому +660

    PROTIP: make sure the piano and the 18th century musician are in the same key.

  • @shreshthadavi141
    @shreshthadavi141 3 роки тому +463

    Speaking as an Indian learning Western Classical Violin,
    My teachers did use some Indian Music Theory in teaching me, and it was hugely beneficial, both in understanding different musical traditions and appreciating their similarities and differences, and in innovation!
    Indian Classical Musical Traditions( Hindustani, Carnatic and various others) are wonderful and deserve some more appreciation!

    • @maxpieters7934
      @maxpieters7934 3 роки тому +5

      Quick question: how does the application of non-western music theory concepts such as classical Indian music theory translate to instruments of western origin, such as your own violin? I known there is such a thing as an Arabic violin, adapted to Arabic music concepts, so you could probably adapt it to other theories of music.

    • @ananthd4797
      @ananthd4797 3 роки тому +12

      @@maxpieters7934 Different kinds of slides and intonation/tuning temperaments can be applied to most fretless string instruments such as the violin. Also, the style in which Indian classical music is played on the violin is slightly different. In general, there are a wider variety of slides which are more frequently used, some of which would require a lot of dexterity.

    • @lamenamethefirst
      @lamenamethefirst 3 роки тому +11

      @@maxpieters7934 As Ananth said, fretless instruments aren't restricted to western tuning systems. Violin is in fact pretty extensively used in Carnatic music here and it's not unlike a kind of Indian fiddling in the way that it throws conventional tuning and even intonation out the window. As a piano player, I'm sadly a bit limited here.

    • @adarshsirsat9110
      @adarshsirsat9110 3 роки тому

      Dude where can i find your music? You channel has no videos :/

    • @user-hj2xy2iy9j
      @user-hj2xy2iy9j 3 роки тому +1

      Shreshth Adavi this is great. India has one of the greatest music traditions around the world. Maybe one day we will have universal music theory(if it is even possible)

  • @trevorfurness5695
    @trevorfurness5695 10 місяців тому

    Adam, thank you for the very stimulating and thought provoking video.
    If you don't mind, I have a question for you. In your opinion, would you say that there different forms of mathematics that are rooted in divergent cultural understandings, or is mathematics a product of a universal search for truth that transcends all human divisions? I'd be interested to hear what you have to say. Many thanks again.

  • @youtux2
    @youtux2 Місяць тому

    What an absolutely beautiful piano commentary! (The end is just brilliant!)

  • @kerbonaut2059
    @kerbonaut2059 3 роки тому +656

    As an indian, seeing you talk about Indian music theory shook me because I rarely hear about all this in my own country. There are so many music classes that aim to teach music through the western lens and others through the Indian lense, but never got any satisfactory understanding of either. It scares me. I should watch her.

    • @comment6864
      @comment6864 3 роки тому +4

      But why? Why are they so into western music in India?

    • @comment6864
      @comment6864 3 роки тому

      @@aniketpathak5679 Ah ok, so i take it Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Rachmaninoff.. not very popular

    • @cproteus
      @cproteus 3 роки тому +68

      Sadly, white supremacy is a ideology not held exclusively *by* white people…

    • @ThePastor59
      @ThePastor59 3 роки тому +1

      Incredible but credible since this commente work as an example of "systematic".

    • @VicSellsPeace
      @VicSellsPeace 3 роки тому +2

      Yeah, that's because it's really a minute and small sub-culture of your people

  • @dame-e-in1258
    @dame-e-in1258 3 роки тому +701

    Swear to god this title said music theory is racist.
    EDIT: To all replying, he already mentioned this on his Twitter. He thought it was too clickbaity.

    • @th3n3wk1dd
      @th3n3wk1dd 3 роки тому +85

      Yup.. still using fallacy to argue points, just decided to "White Supremacy" for some reason.

    • @Ghee_Buttersnaps
      @Ghee_Buttersnaps 3 роки тому +55

      @@th3n3wk1dd what's the fallacy?

    • @MonsieurAuContraire
      @MonsieurAuContraire 3 роки тому +89

      @@th3n3wk1dd let's see hear... if music theory, as most know and learn it in the Western world, was built around the proclaimed exceptionalism of white composers to justify a Germanic cultural supremacy I would say that means Music Theory = Racist.

    • @th3n3wk1dd
      @th3n3wk1dd 3 роки тому +73

      @@MonsieurAuContraire and you don't see how that is a fallacy? I guess that is why you belong to the leftist religion.
      I can proclaim anything.. no one has to follow it. There are general rules set in place as art evolves to see what MOST like.. That isn't racist. You are using identity to reach a conclusion rather than looking at culture where culture and skin color are not the same thing.
      And that is why leftists don't understand the disparity fallacy.

    • @Robertthewren
      @Robertthewren 3 роки тому +88

      I mean it seems like saying "music theory is racist" is kinda unconsciously buying into the same problem he's describing in this video, by centering western music theory as "music theory." Music theory isn't racist, just the way they teach it in the west. So yeah, it's a good title change

  • @spineonthepine4933
    @spineonthepine4933 6 місяців тому +4

    I just caught the dance bit. My alma mater had us take eurythmics in our freshman year, literally a bunch of us dancing around a stage to music for exactly the purpose you and the West African experts you quote here say - mind/body connection with rhythm is a great way to improve understanding of meter. I just assumed that was a thing everyone did.

  • @Joy31608
    @Joy31608 10 місяців тому +5

    What does being “mixed race” have to do with music composition?

    • @WilliamofOckham990
      @WilliamofOckham990 10 місяців тому +4

      Context, music is made by human beings who live in the world, human beings are greatly effected by the social construct of race.

  • @justinvallange
    @justinvallange 3 роки тому +523

    Having watched the full thing, I just kept realizing that the problem is not the method of analysis or the naming of certain musical phenomena, but the implication that fitting perfectly within their box is 'genius'. It's okay to analyze any music with these methods, as long as we forget the idea of "pieces lending themselves to this method of analysis are objectively better'. Using music theory to name what you just played is a good thing, but saying that the name itself implies greatness is not

    • @KnzoVortex
      @KnzoVortex 3 роки тому +31

      It’s a pretty nuanced and intertwining subject. It’s mostly about how we (or at least in the US) selectively hold a very specific music theory system as the objective truth, and this shows in various ways. Our outlook on what we call “music theory,” the extreme selectiveness of what is taught at music schools here, etc.

    • @PatrickGunderson
      @PatrickGunderson 3 роки тому +11

      Fitting inside the box is the opposite of genius. Inventing the box might be genius, but most other composers who are considered genius are considered so because they either expanded the box or didn't pay attention to it and STILL managed to make music that is pleasing

    • @BeardspaceZach
      @BeardspaceZach 3 роки тому

      👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

    • @justinvallange
      @justinvallange 3 роки тому

      @@PatrickGunderson that's why I put quotes around genius, because using the rules isn't really genius

    • @Senumunu
      @Senumunu 3 роки тому +5

      except its not. he literally makes a case for guilt by association. have you even watched the video ?

  • @brohannsebastianbach1212
    @brohannsebastianbach1212 3 роки тому +313

    Music theorist here (I actually have a degree in music theory pedagogy, if you can believe that's a thing!). This is a conflicting video for me and I want to try and lay out a sort of middleground (pun intended). I'll do this with some general observations:
    1. I think the idea of diversifying the music theory canon of composers and genres is a noble pursuit. The issue mainly stems from the difficulty in teaching Western classical music theory. It is a very complicated and deep subject that contradicts itself in many instances and students have a hard time wrapping their heads around a lot of the concepts, even fundamentals. Theory is often taught from this perspective because it is referencing the kind of music that a conservatory musician is most likely to engage with throughout their careers and, contrary to a few points in this video, is actually applicable past the Western classical canon (more on that later). But we are making progress here (also more on that below). I think we also forget how diverse the classical music canon actually is... compare the music of Bach to the music of Mahler to the music of Debussy to the music of Prokofiev and I dare you to say that it is appropriate to put those composers under the same label.
    2. I think this video does a huge disservice to the endeavors and work of many American music theorists who have diversified their curricula. When Adam says "the harmonic style of 18th century European musicians," this is at best reductive and at worst misleading. Any American music theory curricula worth its salt covers Western music from as early as the 1500s and as late as the present. For example, my alma mater has a 5-semester undergraduate curriculum which begins with fundamentals and ends with post tonal analysis with the last few weeks covering more modern trends! A diverse set of composers and styles are covered anywhere from the Renaissance to Jazz to 18th century Western classical to minimalism to Broadway to Rock, etc. This curriculum is filled with examples from as many relevant styles and eras as possible and MANY theorists are actively trying to diversify their rep and the topics they cover. (Example: lament bass as a harmonic/bassline concept. The examples given include its Renaissance origins, its use in Baroque music, Classical music, Romantic music, and also in songs like "Hit the Road, Jack" or "Hotel California.")
    3. Music from other cultures should definitely be more represented, but this takes time to do properly. I've been adding as much as I can to my own curriculum but it isn't easy when the theories are as complex as they are and students are already struggling with the basic concept to begin with (i.e. what the difference between A major and C major is or what their parallel and relative minors are... everyone starts somewhere and even this "simple" concept takes time to internalize). I completely agree that teaching these concepts can be made even more interesting with the inclusion of comparison to Indian music, for example. Theorists just need to finish learning these things themselves PROPERLY. At the very least, citations and resources should be made available to students who are interested and wanting to learn more. More classes should be offered for student who are interested in these things and they should be taught by experts! Once a better grasp is attained by teachers, then it becomes much easier to diversify.
    4. Schenkerian theory is used outside of its intended group of composers all the time. Schenker lists 12 composers, but there were far more composers who were writing in the style that he was interested in whose work can be understood better with his theory. Schenker doesn't list Wagner or Strauss for example, but their music still can be analyzed with this theory, albeit with some additional challenges/considerations. There are theorists who apply his theory to Debussy and Scriabin as well, composers who most would think have NOTHING to do with the theory. Useful information can still be gleaned from using it though. Schenker himself did an analysis of Stravinsky's piano concerto! True, he did it to explain why he though it was bad music, but we all know Schenker's own ideas about what is good and bad aren't really relevant. What matters is that he himself used it on music that it wasn't intended to explain.
    5. Another Schenker point: the graphic notation itself is immensely useful outside of its intended purpose! One can use it to more effectively explain more nuanced elements of any piece of music. The ursatz and urline do NOT need to be implemented to use the graphic notation itself. It is, however, important for someone using this theory to understand its intended use so they can use it elsewhere, just like how Adam suggests using a much more modern theory to understand Chopin (something Chopin certainly never would have thought of himself).
    6. As someone who studied how to teach music theory specifically, I can tell you this conversation is not new at all. We have been talking about the textbooks we use, the examples we cite, and the issues we face for years. Adam uses Aldwell/Schachter as an example, but this textbook is one of the oldest that is still used. Take a look at something like Clendenning/Marvin. This is a much more diverse (more and more) source of Western music theory knowledge. An effort is made to include women composers, American composers, and more than just the Bach to Brahms canon in the pursuit of teaching Western music theory. I myself don't use textbooks, but have studied many of them to understand useful pedagogical models. This gives the freedom to teach a more diverse rep while also having a tried and true model of teaching.
    7. Figured bass has uses outside of preparing a student for Schenker. The most relevant and useful is that it helps with improvising in the Western classical style. Understanding the basis for this style and the method of thinking is obviously useful if a student wants to improvise! It's basically like having a lead sheet and, once learned, opens up a wide variety of possibilities for any student who is looking to improvise stylistically. Improv as a pursuit is becoming much more relevant in conservatory training and figured bass is really needed in order to do this! We also use it as an addition to Roman numeral analysis which is a relevant method of analysis for music spanning almost 300 years.
    8. Final point. It is a little worrying that a field that is already thought of as "boring" or "a waste of time" is being labeled "racist" by such a high profile figure. I can speak from experience that the VAST majority of the students I have taught for the past 7 years have had nothing but positive things to say about their experience with music theory. Again, this sort of reductive label of "racist" is ignoring all of the progress theorists are actively trying to make in this field. This is tearing down instead of looking to the ones who are trying to rebuild. New voices in the filed are added every day, more and more we are diversifying. Yes, CALL OUT the individuals who are promoting German or classical music as superior. But please don't label the entire field this way. Don't give a voice to ignorance. I want to be clear that I have 0 desire to defend the opinions of Ben Shapiro or Schenker (and other problematic figures mentioned) regarding music. But I want to make it clear that many of us are trying and are implementing as much as we can. Let's keep up this trend and show how amazing MUSIC is! The best theory teachers teach theory because they love music. Not because they want to prove some music is better, but because they want to give more people the tools necessary to start somewhere and grow as musicians, no matter what their interests are.

    • @TrishasMusic
      @TrishasMusic 3 роки тому +18

      As a current classical music conservatory student, this was very cool to read about. Thanks for sharing!

    • @pheonixrises11
      @pheonixrises11 3 роки тому +6

      +++

    • @DallasCrane
      @DallasCrane 3 роки тому +70

      Adam should have invited someone like you to present your ideas. A video about music theory without a counterpoint (pun intended) is lazy

    • @MarceloMaccagnan
      @MarceloMaccagnan 3 роки тому +60

      Thank you for your comment. I hope more people will be able to see this. Your number 8 is the most important thing anyone should say when replying to this video. 99% of people watching this video have not and will not have any experience with music theory their entire life,however, by watching such a big UA-camr calling music theory racist, it’s doing a huge disservice for all of us musicians,theorist, teachers etc, trying to make the industry more inclusive and better everyday. Thank you again.

    • @BBarNavi
      @BBarNavi 3 роки тому +3

      This sounds exactly like the word salad an NPC would say. GJ

  • @TheDude_Perfect
    @TheDude_Perfect 8 місяців тому +6

    But, it isn’t evident that European music by European musicians like Bach, Chopin, rachmaninoff, Beethoven and so on was made with race in mind.

    • @rheiagreenland4714
      @rheiagreenland4714 8 місяців тому

      How stupid are you?
      Something can be talked about and used in a racist way regardless of how racist its original creator was.
      You can't say that shooting a black person isn't a racist hate crime just because the manufacturer of the gun didn't make it with racist hate crimes in mind.
      (By the way, there were plenty of 'classical' musicians who definitely were racist)

    • @sblbb929
      @sblbb929 3 місяці тому +1

      To americans it is because in america everything is about race (and about america)

    • @waytoobiased
      @waytoobiased 14 днів тому

      this never said it was - and odds are, it wasn't!
      this is specifically addressing THEORY

  • @mykl746
    @mykl746 9 місяців тому

    Absolutely Love this video, Great work!

  • @KarateNinja13
    @KarateNinja13 2 роки тому +295

    I stumbled across this "lost in translation" issue with music when I was talking to a colleague. I learned most of my music theory through the lense of jazz so when I mentioned that I used the circle of 4ths for developing solos he had no idea what that was. When I showed him it he told me "oh, you wrote the cycle of 5ths backwards."

    • @thewhiteshadow6098
      @thewhiteshadow6098 2 роки тому +34

      It's always made more sense to me as a circle of 4ths.

    • @antoniofarina716
      @antoniofarina716 2 роки тому +3

      If there's a musical element, you can turn it backwards (or however you want to) and get something else.

    • @p39483
      @p39483 2 роки тому +6

      @@thewhiteshadow6098 The fifth is the first division of the octave. In fact it is the mean average of the base frequency and the same note an octave higher: (f+2f)/2. The third is the mean of the 5th and the base. The minor seventh is the mean of the 5th and the octave above the base, though TET tuning approximates this one poorly. These divisions were seen as fundamental because they equate to fretboard distances and such ratios sounded pleasing in harmony. From this point of view the 4th is merely derived from the fifth as an inversion. If you were dividing up a fretboard you would come upon the fifth first, and would probably consider it the next fundamental interval after the octave.

    • @bsmusicd
      @bsmusicd 2 роки тому +1

      The circle of 4ths is pretty standard in Western Classical theory as well. In standard progressions the circle of fifths is more emphasized, however.

    • @gcrav
      @gcrav 2 роки тому +2

      The circle of fifths is closer to the root of theory - the most fundamental division of the scale based on the mean of the octave frequencies - than is the circle of fourths. The circle of fourths is more of a tool of improvisational practice - progression patterns, resolving towards the root, shifting modes, chromatic substitutions and such - than is the circle of fifths. At least prior to George Russell.

  • @rush2795
    @rush2795 3 роки тому +160

    "here's me eating Fritos....
    ...in the harmonic style of 18th-century European musicians"

  • @jjs3863
    @jjs3863 10 місяців тому

    I am so glad I started this video. Mr. Neely, excellent work on this analysis.

  • @cheyennepetersen3417
    @cheyennepetersen3417 29 днів тому +1

    First, this is an excellent video and voices a lot of ideas that I didn't have language for in orchestra growing up but have since thought more and more about. I played violin from 4th grade through sophomore year of college and took a break from performance. Lately I've been focused on electronic music and synthesizers and hope to start performing again in a less traditional sense. (I found this video because I'm giving a presentation tomorrow on the history of sampling). I just finished taking a class on learning to use Ableton and realized over the last several months that my efforts to begin composing my own music are a bit stunted by a lack of "music theory" education in my orchestra classes growing up. After watching this, I'm wondering if that's not as bad as I thought. I think it would be incredibly useful to still learn chord structures and how to apply those to achieve a particular mood in my music but I am glad that my music education background is not entirely colored by exactly what you were talking about.
    Especially during college, I got into listening to more diverse music genres (previously my staples were indie/alternative/rock/metal/etc.) and in the last year or two alone I've deep-dived into a lot of synth-oriented experimental artists. Branching out of the music that was handed to me by people in my life as a kid has been so helpful in breaking out of that bubble of 18th century Western music traditions. I'm going to share this with everyone who will watch a 45 minute video in hopes that other people realize that they're in the bubble too.

    • @cheyennepetersen3417
      @cheyennepetersen3417 21 день тому

      @@sperckensiedoitch a synth is an instrument that was developed in the west but you can play it however you want. In fact many DAWs have the option to tune to non-western scales. Many international experiemental artists use synthesizers and that doesn’t take away from their style of music, be it traditional from their country of origin or in a “western” style of music

  • @damhood2033
    @damhood2033 2 роки тому +884

    As a North African aspiring musician, since I started learning theory, I started with western, Indian, and Middle Eastern. Many people told me that I should stick to one but I didn't listen. I think I have a lot better understanding of theory than they do.

    • @Tausami
      @Tausami 2 роки тому +35

      Yeah, I also find it really helpful. All of these musical traditions are valid, but they're also all subjective, and I think there's a lot to be learned by studying many traditions. It helps to get at what music *is*, and what things are really fundamental, vs what things are stylistic choices

    • @American-Dragon
      @American-Dragon 2 роки тому +11

      Take from everything/give to everyone
      Things are just things until you make them something that they were not intended to be
      Fuck hate and fuck those that look to inject it where it does not belong
      I love North Africa
      I hope whatever music and everything you do explodes and helps color my artistic pallet
      God Bless

    • @christianskjod3440
      @christianskjod3440 2 роки тому +5

      Studying all the elements and sides of a subject is one of the best approaches. You are absolutely correct.

    • @bethmoore7722
      @bethmoore7722 2 роки тому +2

      What do you play? Do you do any composing? I’d love to hear you perform.

    • @brianmi40
      @brianmi40 2 роки тому +4

      Finding therein a unique combination that "speaks" to your listeners can be a huge pathway to great music and potentially fame. Think Desert Rose by Sting as an example.
      There are obviously still huge untapped areas within any musical style or genre, but there are WORLDS of unimagined music that crosses those lines.

  • @rexen7732
    @rexen7732 3 роки тому +895

    "But he was a relatively obscure composer in his day, and rarely performed after his death."
    I picture Bach with a portable electric keyboard playing on special occasions when important people visit his grave.

    • @spyguy318
      @spyguy318 3 роки тому +143

      He must be de-composing!

    • @glynemartin
      @glynemartin 2 роки тому +15

      @@spyguy318 boom!

    • @JediMobius
      @JediMobius 2 роки тому +16

      Glad I'm not the only one who was thrown by that phrasing.

    • @achenarmyst2156
      @achenarmyst2156 2 роки тому +4

      He *was* a composer, and (was) rarely performed after his death. Sigh...

    • @ShaharHarshuv
      @ShaharHarshuv 2 роки тому +4

      Even in heaven he's out of job

  • @TigerViolin
    @TigerViolin 8 місяців тому

    Currently watching this and I’ve got to say, I don’t think I’ve looked Chopin using figured bass as the basis (haha) of analyzing the chord progressions, given they’re from the Romantic period rather than Baroque. I do agree with a lot of what you mention though and a lot of this is discussed at my university. “Music Theory I-IV” is very much taught through the lens of European classical music, but we have a class where these issues and distinctions among different theories are the main focus.

  • @abdulhamid9605
    @abdulhamid9605 5 місяців тому

    Great video, has me hooked till the end.

  • @turtledruid464
    @turtledruid464 3 роки тому +485

    When I took AP music theory, my teacher basically said up front: "this is an introduction to the way classical european composers made music. We will not be learning anything else in this course. College Board has decided that this is what you need to know, so that's what I'm teaching."

    • @lacanian1500
      @lacanian1500 3 роки тому +37

      accurate

    • @strayorion2031
      @strayorion2031 3 роки тому +46

      We need more teachers like that

    • @locker199601
      @locker199601 3 роки тому +97

      I mean at least she's honest. My university music theory teacher just went on about how Bach literally invented music itself and acted as if the 20th century just never happened. Except for some reason she liked the Beatles, but whenever she used them as an example in class she would always insist that they got their musical ideas from Bach. And I'm like, girl, maybe George Martin listened to Bach but John Lennon was definitely taking his queues from black musicians.

    • @Johnny_T779
      @Johnny_T779 3 роки тому +3

      Woah! Cool teacher! 😁

    • @bakmanthetitan
      @bakmanthetitan 3 роки тому +17

      @@locker199601 Haha, I do get the sense that that is not an uncommon experience; however, Bach did "invent" an astounding amount of modern music, in a way! His chorales were constitute much of the study of four-part harmony since his "rediscovery" by Mendelssohn. The sheer quantity and depth of his oeuvre is quite literally unmatched in many respects. Not to over-deify him or justify his usage in discounting modern influences, but he was a God.

  • @thingsivelearnedfrombarryh2616
    @thingsivelearnedfrombarryh2616 3 роки тому +161

    Thank you for talking about Barry Harris Adam. He is one of the most important figures in Jazz. Not only as a Master player but also as an Educator. He talks about Harmony based on 4 scales of chords. Major sixth diminished, Minor sixth diminished, Dominant diminished and Dominant flat 5 diminished. All 8 note scales. He actually talks about Bach and Chopin knowing and using these scales . He has taught and played all over the world spreading our beautiful music. He is an American treasure .
    Thank you again for using your tremendous platform to bring awareness to this Master.

    • @TheVigilantStewards
      @TheVigilantStewards 3 роки тому +1

      any book that talks about that? I learned a lot of theory at berklee and full sail and it's just meh for usefulness, I would love to learn useful theory

    • @thingsivelearnedfrombarryh2616
      @thingsivelearnedfrombarryh2616 3 роки тому +7

      There are a lot of Barry's Master classes posted on UA-cam. He has DVDs for sale on his website. Hopefully that helps.

    • @callmemurphz
      @callmemurphz 3 роки тому +1

      white people made the piano. blacks need to admit they appropriated white culture. this is real racism when history isn't accurate.

    • @PaperMario64
      @PaperMario64 Рік тому

      @@callmemurphz pianos are percussion instruments and black people made drums. Try again.

  • @vanek_9397
    @vanek_9397 11 місяців тому +20

    I find music theory a way to interpretate a musical idea to figure out some patterns, that can help you write a piece of music in the same style. I mean, Mozart hasn't written C chord after G7, because it's right and it's music theory. That was just the style where he lived and wrote. He took no complex jazz chords only because he didn't know them or/and he could think "that sounds weird"

  • @wanparaph
    @wanparaph 5 місяців тому

    I super love this. A mentor i was working with pointed this out. Having played classical guitar and double bass most of my life It was shocking but glaringly obvious when she put it into perspective.

  • @avkalkonien
    @avkalkonien 2 роки тому +384

    37:34 i've been scrolling through the comments for a while now, how on earth is no one talking about the fact that Adam says he didn't include a wikipedia source, yet when you go in to the source document there clearly is one, and it turns out to be a rickroll article? XD

    • @Lykyk
      @Lykyk 2 роки тому +4

      Because the meme stopped being funny 10 years ago.

    • @penence347
      @penence347 2 роки тому +89

      @@Lykyk "Every party needs a pooper that's why they invited you"

    • @axelpuff7594
      @axelpuff7594 2 роки тому +22

      Because (almost) nobody actually reads the source document.

    • @beidouvirus3978
      @beidouvirus3978 2 роки тому +2

      @@axelpuff7594 lmao fuck the RRL

  • @OfficialTigerino
    @OfficialTigerino 3 роки тому +455

    Im kinda hungover rn so my thoughts maybe incoherent, but as a Japanese person who was taught "music theory" I just kinda assumed that it will be Eurocentric. Like I don't know how to explain it, but this whole discussion feels extremely obvious - Western music theory will have Eurocentric bias based on the the context and the personal factors of contributors.
    It kinda draws parallel to how medicine and medical sciences are viewed, as everything is in English and regional forms of medicine are small scaled compared to Western medicine. Idk this feels very weird to me that all of this is being addressed in the video when I just assumed everyone knew and kept in mind the flaws of dropping the "Western" from music theory. Western music is the largest field of music rn at least in academics, so it feels normal for me to just say "music theory" because we assume that it's Western (the majority) in the context.

    • @sgttomas
      @sgttomas 3 роки тому +49

      This is America's soul being bared. We can apply the same logic of this video to this video itself. The American experience of racism in music theory.

    • @lazergurka-smerlin6561
      @lazergurka-smerlin6561 3 роки тому +6

      How the heck did the west get everywhere in the first place?

    • @alemutasa6189
      @alemutasa6189 3 роки тому +45

      @@sgttomas not America's soul, United States' soul. This is not the Bolivian soul or the Mexican soul we're talking about. That's another proof of how much "United Statians" think of themselves when approaching the world

    • @realtalk13
      @realtalk13 3 роки тому +49

      I feel like the section of this video where Ewell faced a literal symposium of backlash for pointing this out shows why your assumption, though informed and good natured, shouldn't be applied to the entire field. Because it clearly isn't. And that's kind of Neelys and Ewells point. That for theorists like Schenker, the white supremacist "undertone" WAS the point. It was explicitly acknowledged. But in modern teachings, the white supremacy either is unaddressed or tacitly endorsed at the expense of other equally valid understandings and perspectives.

    • @1685Violin
      @1685Violin 3 роки тому +36

      @@alemutasa6189 America is just a short hand for the "United States of America" in this context. No need to be obtuse.

  • @sherryab3964
    @sherryab3964 4 місяці тому +2

    I have a music degree in Jazz . I learned classical theory of course but specialized in Jazz theory and performance. So there is music theory and genres specific to other cultures.
    It’s true about self expression and the rules of music. It is so stifling as an artist to have to follow certain “rules” when one can totally come up with their own styles and rules of expression.

  • @tharios4289
    @tharios4289 10 місяців тому +2

    First of all, I really like your videos Adam, and I agree most of the stuff that is in this video, but I have a quesiton about your opinion on "figured bass." I think that figured bass is such a great and easy way to understand what is the chord, and which function it is in a piece of classical music. Even for not classical music, you can write the chords by figured bass and it will work on any type of music style that uses 12 note divison temperament system. I dont get why you dont like the figured bass, since you use it all the time in your videos! Like Can you give reasons why you said that it would be easier for you to analyse chopin by using barry harris's sixth diminished scale rather than using figured bass and tonality funcitons? I would be very glad if you answer that, thanks for the video as always.

    • @D4ngeresque
      @D4ngeresque 10 місяців тому

      He's butthurt that it was invented by a white man. Ironically, while being one himself... He's on Team Butthurt.

  • @BenLevin
    @BenLevin 3 роки тому +4820

    We have so much to gain by expanding music theory education to include more approaches from the ground up. I wish that dancing and singing was emphasized as much as harmony when I was first learning. Luckily, I’m not dead yet, there’s still time to learn! Thanks for this illuminating video and I’m glad I could contribute in a small way!

    • @bcan5512
      @bcan5512 3 роки тому +52

      Ben Show - (Learning how to dance) when

    • @mayaralshofe3498
      @mayaralshofe3498 3 роки тому +34

      Ben is lucky because he is still a child inside.

    • @adynyoung6431
      @adynyoung6431 3 роки тому +20

      Your contributions to this amazing video really made me more aware that the UA-cam music theory 'scene' is not only a force for good - it's a very interconnected one. Love your work

    • @gregdjentyguy9986
      @gregdjentyguy9986 3 роки тому +35

      No one limits your education man, Marty Friedman (a guitar player) started exploring the Japanese music composition and found a unique sound for his music - his hard search paid off, so you can do just the same thing, it's a free world

    • @MattMusicianX
      @MattMusicianX 3 роки тому +15

      Ben, ethnomusicology has been doing exactly that for a long time now, dancing included. And I love that you feel the same about dancing as I do.

  • @sargecad3t
    @sargecad3t Рік тому +525

    As a teenager my family lived on a Marine Corps base on Okinawa, and for a while I got really into traditional Okinawan folk music. My mom didn't like it so we never played it on car rides 🤣
    Same kinda thing happened at church. My family is Russian Orthodox, which generally uses very westernized music. On the rare occasion we had to use the eastern, Byzantine style tones (common among the Greek and Antiochian churches, among other) my mom would get frustrated, as conducting the choir using such an unfamiliar style was really difficult for her.
    Edit: not a dig at my mom, she's a wonderful lady. Just pointing out how a perception of one style as "standard" can affect your enjoyment of other styles.

    • @JBeestonian
      @JBeestonian 11 місяців тому +1

      I enjoyed Kunkunshi, listening to Sanshin. Much of what I heard them play was in B major or C major anyway, with the occasional added half step. Their unique vibrato was also really cool too.

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 10 місяців тому +1

      I envy you, always wanted to visit Okinawa because of the Karate Kid movies lol

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain 8 місяців тому

      This is why BTS is leading the way out of the moribund pop world after the A&R teams assassinated Concept Rock in 1977. They control their PR, so aren't whipsawed by the greed of the Labels. In the west, the growth of Indie has done the same thing - it's only because the corporate channels are still associated with restrictive practices that the dinosaurs of The Voice etc survive. What will be interesting is what emerges from the wreck of acappella in the UK.
      It's also to be noted that John Taverner and his schoolmate John Rutter are/were both devotees of Orthodox cantoral, which has also inspired the bottom bass community in AC - the likes of Castellucci and Froud. That in turn relates to Jewish cantoral extempore.

    • @AwesomeWholesome
      @AwesomeWholesome 6 місяців тому

      Strange place to bump into a fellow Japanese Orthodox! Does your family still live in Okinawa?

    • @sargecad3t
      @sargecad3t 6 місяців тому

      @@AwesomeWholesome Nope, most of my family is in Texas. I'm on the East Coast

  • @xmanchar
    @xmanchar 9 місяців тому

    Thanks so much for this video. I love your in-depth analysis of the subject matter.

  • @maxxslime7159
    @maxxslime7159 2 місяці тому +6

    The piano was invented in Europe 50 years before America was even a thing and for almost 200 years it was europeans who mostly played classical music, of course the most famous composers are white..., why does everyone want to turn everything in to a race issue?

    • @otherworIdlyfoe
      @otherworIdlyfoe 2 місяці тому +2

      you should try actually watching the video for once instead of coming to a conclusion based on the title or first 5 minutes!

    • @sforza209
      @sforza209 12 днів тому

      Because the other races are trying to perpetuate revenge.

  • @gaillewis5472
    @gaillewis5472 2 роки тому +661

    Spanish major, here. You hit the nail on the head. I spent a semester studying picaresque novels and hundred year old short stories. It was like walking on a combination of hot gravel and broken glass. I got a better grasp of Castilian chatting with folks in the grocery store, bakery and local cafés.

    • @kainajones9393
      @kainajones9393 2 роки тому +9

      If you were a music theory major, as opposed to a Spanish major, you would realize that the above video is nearly all BS

    • @tobi1314
      @tobi1314 2 роки тому +50

      @@kainajones9393 devil’s advocate here asking a question: Why is it BS? What arguments do you have to sustain that affirmation? Not judging, just curious to hear the other side of the story.

    • @tobi1314
      @tobi1314 2 роки тому +30

      Classical and Spanish philologist here! I loved reading and analyzing the Spaniard golden century, but man, even as a Spanish native speaker, it was tough. However when we were studying those texts, the professors helped providing a synchronic perspective of the language and how it shaped the dialects spoken in the Americas. Really interesting stuff

    • @kainajones9393
      @kainajones9393 2 роки тому +17

      @@tobi1314 I procured an MA in music theory at SUNY during the 1990s. Here are some of the courses presently offered to graduate theory students at SUNY:
      MUS 502, Proseminar in Tonal Analysis: Analysis of Tonal Music
      MUS 504, Analysis of Music of the 21st Century: Analyzing Tonal Music from the 20th and 21st
      MUS 507 Studies in Music History: Histories of Music Theory Centuries
      MUS 534 Opera Studies
      MUS 536, Area Studies in Ethnomusicology: Music, Belief, and the Black Experience in the US
      MUS 539, Proseminar in Ethnomusicology: Ethnomusicology in the Colonial Frame
      MUS 541 Topics in the Cross-Cultural Study of Music: BlaQueer Sounds-Queer Negotiations in Mus African-American Music
      MUS 547 Topics in Baroque Music: The Harmonious Cosmos in Theory and Practice
      MUS 555 Topics in 20th-Century Music: Ecology and Its Discontents
      MUS 559, Topics in Analysis: The Music of Charles Mingus
      Some white guy stuff, but not predominantly.
      I think his opening comment suggesting replacing the term "music theory" with "the harmonic style of 18th century musicians." is specious and ill-informed at best, and demonstrates a complete lack of understanding of the study of music theory in academic settings. Music theory begins way before this, and proceeds far past it. However, if you want to understand the synthesis of chords, scales and modes, then you're gonna, as a theory student, study the theories of "white guys." at some point. Sorry...just the way it is. Nearly all great (black) jazz masters used chords, modes and scales innovated hundreds of years prior by, yup, white European dudes. Does that mean they’re superior..NO. Does that mean "white music" is better...NO. Does that mean they’re “white supremacists”…NO! What is he actually critiquing? Music Theory in academic settings? If so he got it mostly wrong. To suggest that a "standard" music theory, is put forth as some sort of rigid white regime borders on the ridiculous. Soon we'll be discarding Calculus, Quantum physics and Relativity, as I'm sure that Newton's, Einstein's and Plank's great sin was that they were white. The above video does a great job in creating numerous strawmen, red herrings, and cherry picking, I think it more should be titled: “A Little Knowledge is Dangerous” or "Yet Another Self Deprecating White Dude with a Chip On His Shoulder and Lots of Seemingly Important Things To Say"

    • @tobi1314
      @tobi1314 2 роки тому +30

      @@kainajones9393 I understand your points. What I think you might be missing is the point of considering “Music theory” as only the European way of understanding music. The problem with music theory, according to the video is that it narrows the explanation for different types of music. Not everything can be fully explained through music theory, just like the Spanish example he provided, therefore, what ends outside MT(music theory, because I’m lazy), which traditionally can be understood as non western music, could be taken by some people with racist views as inferior. Also, this theorists who is very famous in the USA and also was very racist, despite his jewish heritage.
      I mean, it’s a 30 minute video essay, quite complicated to comprise in one comment. TL:DR Music theory isn’t racist per se, what’s racist is the usage it has.

  • @Vinc90
    @Vinc90 3 роки тому +714

    Nahre Sol trying her best to calm us down

    • @willybeama1
      @willybeama1 3 роки тому +43

      The absolute truth. This video is triggering as fuck.

    • @willybeama1
      @willybeama1 3 роки тому +81

      Will Pogue I do t know about common sense, lol. I just know that as a musician, this video hurt. I’m not saying it isn’t true. It just hurts acknowledging its truth because I’ve built my music teaching career on it. I’m wrestling and grappling with these truths. I’m glad he acknowledged that he too, is finding this a jagged little pill. It just hurts.

    • @MutleeIsTheAntiGod
      @MutleeIsTheAntiGod 3 роки тому +12

      Nahre just instantly calms me tbh

    • @cursedcitrus2474
      @cursedcitrus2474 3 роки тому +3

      what song did she play

    • @willybeama1
      @willybeama1 3 роки тому +9

      Will Pogue our experience of the material was different. It is what it is.

  • @BeachBomberFishing
    @BeachBomberFishing 9 місяців тому +2

    Funny that you mention Spanish. As a Chicano that speaks Spanish, I was in Spanish class in high school. We were taught European Spanish, which is totally different from the Spanish we speak in US. It is a common consensus that Castilian Spanish is the more h8gh culture Spanish, as compared to Spanish spoken in Latin america.

  • @rossharmonics
    @rossharmonics 4 місяці тому +1

    I started with just intonation in the 1970s while at the Boston Conservatory. I start from a question "how are musical systems created", In the 1980s, a friend of mine built a 256-matrix keyboard as a result of a conversation we had. What I have done since that time was to pare down my ideas so that my system would remove as many presuppositions as possible and proceed in a quasi-axiomatic path. "Quasi" since we are living in a highly impatient period of time. I wound up not only question our predominant music theory but also our predominant mathematical theory. You'd be surprised how much of what we learn in mathematics comes from the same core period as the core music theory you are discussing.

  • @fideldely5988
    @fideldely5988 3 роки тому +276

    My mentor DANILO PEREZ went to Senegal, Congo and other African countries. He told me something that changed my life for ever: in Africa, drummers FOLLOW the dancer's moves.
    That, combined with "no one who can't dance will get a music degree"... Booom

    • @aarongrooves
      @aarongrooves 3 роки тому +3

      Danilo Perez!! 👏🙌👍

    •  3 роки тому +6

      It is the same in Flamenco.

    • @techdad5606
      @techdad5606 3 роки тому +1

      He's awesome piano player!

    • @MrClassicmetal
      @MrClassicmetal 3 роки тому +5

      In James Brown's band everybody better follow the drummer, or else he'll make some changes in people's lives.

    • @hbp2m
      @hbp2m 3 роки тому +3

      That's fair: no legs, no degree.

  • @elliotw.888
    @elliotw.888 3 роки тому +1591

    who was here when the title was "music theory is racist"

    • @emptymeasure17
      @emptymeasure17 3 роки тому +24

      Me lol what happened

    • @erpaloinen
      @erpaloinen 3 роки тому +5

      Yup

    • @roberto4350
      @roberto4350 3 роки тому +4

      Me

    • @gregoryhunter7413
      @gregoryhunter7413 3 роки тому +170

      I guess he figured that the spicy title was making ppl react angrily without hearing out the content of the vid. Idk I liked the provocative title

    • @ThoughtGum
      @ThoughtGum 3 роки тому +51

      @@emptymeasure17 Adam must have realized after reading the comments that that was a bad title

  • @jasonforster9445
    @jasonforster9445 8 місяців тому

    As a composer in western music on a classical guitar i work from the german stuff but i also kind of just do my music my way. I legitimately developed my own theory of music.

    • @Aphrodite_ErosLuvChild214-80
      @Aphrodite_ErosLuvChild214-80 6 місяців тому

      The antiwhites so so badly want to attempt to say that western kind is nothing we never had anything we stole it all ! But let's be real why you they all flock to western countries if in fact they had the same biospirit as western kind ? It's laughable because they attempt to take two positions one as vulnerable oppressed ppl who we stole and forced labor onto , and they also attempt to take on the position of being the cradle of mankind and the first to have done it all and after they did it we somehow came through and just took from them "a superior" being everything its so laugable its ridiculous they will regret it because western kind are waking up and becoming aware of the the psychological warfare that has been waged against them our children are suffering greatly and we as western kind must stop the ethno nationalist positions and instead just be western kind in unity and fight back with honest information aka info wars we can no longer afford to take an individual approach because all the poc have teamed up against us all all across all western countries and western lands we conquered and or purchased exe South Africa and such we are making great strides we have big influences speaking on our abuse ! We must stop this go to yt channel no white guilt and please learn the lexicon I'd you want to secure our positions on this planet we are near extinction levels and that's no joke at all

  • @harmonicajimbo
    @harmonicajimbo Місяць тому +1

    Brilliant! I love your ideas for a new teaching. I find dancing essential when performing, as do many rockers, country and almost any style except orchestral, where we hire a conductor to dance! Keep on exploring. Oh, CRT, few really understand. You find excellent thinkers. Thanks,

  • @thenderyoshi
    @thenderyoshi 3 роки тому +948

    But that's just a theory, a _harmonic style of 18th century european musicians!_

    • @wokeil
      @wokeil 3 роки тому +3

      bravo

    • @commandercaptain4664
      @commandercaptain4664 3 роки тому +4

      Your Snoke _a harmonic style of 18th century european musicians_ sucks!

    • @opsquash
      @opsquash 3 роки тому +2

      … a GAME theory! Thanks for watching

    • @timmynoya
      @timmynoya 3 роки тому

      Aaaaaaaannddd,,,
      FINE!!

    • @Aztec1050
      @Aztec1050 3 роки тому +1

      You are obviously not academic

  • @BlowingShtUp
    @BlowingShtUp 3 роки тому +297

    I learned schenker in music school. I did my senior thesis on Holst's Mars Bringer of War partly because Schenker's techniques fail so spectacularly to describe it.

    • @abrielferreira
      @abrielferreira 3 роки тому +5

      Would love to know more!

    • @BlowingShtUp
      @BlowingShtUp 3 роки тому +51

      @@abrielferreira starting point: Holst uses triads the way a metal guitarist uses power chords - to add thickness to a single note line. Looking at it this way, you don't need to get caught up in harmonic complexity & the counterpoint & rhythmic structure is clearer.

    • @diogosaraiva9547
      @diogosaraiva9547 3 роки тому +3

      That's really interesting and very clear listening to it now that you said it

    • @skeevyguagacongas4973
      @skeevyguagacongas4973 3 роки тому +18

      MusicTheoryEgghead? more like, TheHarmonicStyleOf18thCentutyEuropeanMusiciansEgghead amirite

    • @coconutflour9868
      @coconutflour9868 3 роки тому +2

      Love that piece

  • @GeorgeChatzopoulosGuitar
    @GeorgeChatzopoulosGuitar 4 місяці тому +2

    Creativity and knowledge updates are super cool, but we don't have to reinvent the wheel. Question : Is there a better, basic, more organised system (than the western music theory) to serve us today, in order to build a better understanding of music in general ? I think we should use what we have, and build upon it.
    Historically speaking, the political and economic conditions shape the art forms and their development. If we lose the historical perspective for this development there is the possibility to devalue fundamental concepts of arts and get lost...

  • @aqueous3051
    @aqueous3051 6 місяців тому +4

    “Rarely performed in the years after his death” I would assume so since he was dead, he wouldn’t be able to perform

  • @gatfatf
    @gatfatf 3 роки тому +424

    I'm going to sonic hell but why not. "You mean Indian musicians have a whole system for Raag Time?" I'll see myself out.

    • @brentspetner3395
      @brentspetner3395 3 роки тому +7

      I’d give you 10 upvotes if I could.

    • @xirenzhang9126
      @xirenzhang9126 3 роки тому +2

      Brent Johnson make 10 channels using the same account smh

    • @sorryminati4719
      @sorryminati4719 3 роки тому +8

      Bruh. There are times and periods. Secondly , there are even days on which music is suited. There are songs for rain, for sun, for the wind. It's pretty cool tbh

    • @benbrown1430
      @benbrown1430 3 роки тому

      take my like and leave

    • @dlevi67
      @dlevi67 3 роки тому

      Take my like and stay. Sonic hell is closer than what you think.

  • @pianojay5146
    @pianojay5146 3 роки тому +1051

    Was here when the title was more ‘clickbait-y’, in comparison.

    • @JarredWrightMusic
      @JarredWrightMusic 3 роки тому +172

      I feel like the new title is more accurate and nuanced. People think of many things when they hear “racist” and they’ll often dismiss it immediately if it is disagreeable to them. I told a family member about this video and he immediately scoffed at the original title and was not open to the ideas presented afterwards. Better to use less loaded language.

    • @GioAndollo
      @GioAndollo 3 роки тому +35

      JarredWrightMusic completely agree. I shared with someone who checked out during the 4th minute, when Neely suggests that folx find European composers superior to black American composers. Many will not be able to let their guard down long enough to appreciate the historical, cultural, and theoretical nuance sprinkled thruout the vid.

    • @joelmarriner487
      @joelmarriner487 3 роки тому +27

      @@RyanOManchester care to elaborate?

    • @sodothehivesonhisleg
      @sodothehivesonhisleg 3 роки тому +72

      @@RyanOManchester he expressly pointed out that we should do cross cultural comparisons and the video made it very clear that its a two way street. It was also made clear in the video that at no point was anyone suggesting dropping the existing (Schenkarian) tools of analysis, or appreciation for the mostly German composers of the canon.
      This video really only suggests that we broaden our education to include a wider definition of musical theory and draw from musical traditions beyond the narrow framework currently defined as music theory within the west. This just means expanding our concept of Quality to include more diverse sources. You don't need to stop loving Bach just because you also appreciate Charlie Parker.

    • @GemsOnVHS
      @GemsOnVHS 3 роки тому +33

      @@RyanOManchester These are some of the thoughts I was having while listening as well. I guess some of it just plays, to my ears, as if we're blaming one culture for something that is universal (framing music theory on your culture's experience). When he was, at 7 minutes, comparing it to studying "300 year old Spanish", I kept thinking, yes, you go even further back than that often, its called studying Latin, which is extremely helpful for understanding ALL of the romance languages, giving you a way to give meaning to root words and see the evolution. Yes, we need to diversify, but I do not believe there is as conscious an effort to stymie that progress as some of the video makes it out to be. It's a natural progression of globalization that is happening as we speak. Fantastic video though, not meaning to criticize it, this is a very nuanced thing, music theory! I'm glad he changed the title to reflect that. Love it.

  • @JimMedcraft
    @JimMedcraft 4 місяці тому +1

    I was trained by an experimental composer of high reputation and linage (if you are into all that) but, it was pretty much drilled into me to use the phrase "in the western musical tradition" as a preference when talking about 'traditional' music tradition. But quite heverly leaned on Igor Stravinsky's definition of "music as organised sound"
    To which John Cage answers 4"33, but it's still an organised sound in a lack there of. But I looked into light and film as sound which led to a career touring the world as a VJ. And I now write video synthesisers. While I can can think of what I do as visual music most acts I work with would not really have any idea that that's what I'm doing and why it seems to be effective enough I keep getting booked. But I have gotten to travel and work around the world preforming along with all sorts of music in all sorts of settings.
    Also the idea of Genre is entirely crated by record labels to help sell by association Just ignore completely!

  • @qtrax100
    @qtrax100 4 місяці тому +1

    bloody good point, default tuning seems a bit fishy too.

  • @redridinghoodie34
    @redridinghoodie34 Рік тому +86

    I really like the Spanish language analogy here because a lot of schools don't even teach MODERN European Spanish dialect, growing up I always learned Latin American Spanish, we were told about differences between the two (namely verb conjugation rules & such), but my teachers never stressed that we learn Spanish the way it's spoken in Spain & encouraged us to learn LatAm Spanish (ofc this could also have been a regional thing since we were closer to LatAm but this only further proves the point abour practicality)

    • @Person4649Person
      @Person4649Person Рік тому

      Wow, so your local public school teachers are not Gods or geniuses who know everything about linguistics? They are not the next Noam Chomsky? Just people who get paid a middle class wage? Shocking.

  • @fehzorz
    @fehzorz 3 роки тому +190

    25:50 even in my conservative music school we were taught about the 7 fundamentals - rhythm, dynamics, melody, harmony, tone colour, texture, form. Shapiro isn't even getting western music theory right.

    • @bugglesleygsf6857
      @bugglesleygsf6857 3 роки тому +72

      It's almost like Shapiro is making a bad-faith argument from authority to make it seem as if his (and his audience's) distaste for the products of Black culture is actually an "objective" critique and thus not racist at all. Couldn't be!

    • @fehzorz
      @fehzorz 3 роки тому +34

      It's just hilarious that Ben Shapiro's theory of music can't distinguish between an orchestra playing a symphony and its ringtone version

    • @mr.bluesky4130
      @mr.bluesky4130 3 роки тому +22

      fehzorz the part I don’t get about Bens argument is that most rap songs literally have melody in them, most instrumentals are led by some melodic figure, take the guitar lead in *i* by Kendrick Lamar for example. As well, there’s the melody a rapper carves out in a flow, but Ben ignores that so I guess I have to as well :(((((

    • @jacobgutierrez864
      @jacobgutierrez864 3 роки тому +26

      I also love how Ben can’t acknowledge that Rap is poetry- he simply isn’t capable of ascribing that to black people, he has to call it “rhythmic speaking”. Its the exact same disdain 20th century classical composers had for Jazz.

    • @raginbakin1430
      @raginbakin1430 3 роки тому +11

      OutScreamer It’s also astonishing that Ben would say “Jazz is a degradation of classical”... like lmao what? They are completely different genres of music with different skill sets required to play them. A classical musician couldn’t easily play jazz well and vice versa. He also acts as if jazz doesn’t require intense study and practice. Like has he ever heard Giant Steps... or any bebop jazz recording for that matter?

  • @bluetortilla
    @bluetortilla 4 місяці тому +4

    Fair point but what does this have to do with white supremacy? Why are so many people dissing on classical recently? Please listen to music from everywhere and like what you like.

    • @XiELEd4377
      @XiELEd4377 4 місяці тому

      Nope, he isn't dissing on classical music. If you've watched the first minutes of the video, popular culture (and even in musician culture) often likes to make the adherence of the musical style of the 18th century europeans as some "mark of musical genius". There's more to this video than the concept, so putting out conclusions without having watched at least a few minutes is sort of unfair, isn't it?

  • @beepbopboop3221
    @beepbopboop3221 5 місяців тому

    I have never taken music theory or music appreciation, but my high school chorus class a long time ago had guests bring in their instruments. We got to listen to indian string instruments and singing. I think my friend Swati connected the chorus director with someone she knew. Even though I'm part of japanese, I didn't get exposed to japanese music until anime became popular and more readily available (imported subtitled or dubbed dvds - the internet was too slow for streaming just yet.) So when I heard Aurora's song I was made to love. I thought that could be a japanese love song. Sure enough, a japanese singer has already done a cover. The japanese language, which is familiar sounding but I understand none, is very sing song-ish to me. Although this could be because I only heard grandma speak it when she prayed or was doing self instructive self-talk.