2 Super Satisfying Chord Progressions And How To Write Your Own

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 тра 2024
  • Download Pure Piano and Pure Upright:
    Pure Piano: apps.apple.com/gb/app/pure-pi... e-instruments.com/shop/instru...
    Pure Upright: e-instruments.com/shop/instru...
    and check out my walkthrough of the new "Sympathetic Resonance" feature: • Pure Piano - Major 3.0...
    🎹🎹🎹
    My video on the "Circle of 5ths" chord progression: • Songs that use the Cir...
    The perfect 5th is at the heart of how harmony works and these two chord progressions get their satisfying sound from this most consonant of intervals!
    And, an extra special thanks goes to Peter Keller, Douglas Lind, Vidad Flowers, Ivan Pang, Waylon Fairbanks, Jon Dye, Austin Russell, Christopher Ryan, Toot & Paul Peijzel, the channel’s Patreon saints! 😇
    SUPPORT ME ON PATREON: / davidbennettpiano 🎹
    0:00 Introduction
    0:22 I vi ii V
    2:00 Perfect 5th
    3:49 vi ii V I
    5:49 Sponsor
    6:41 Isn't She Lovely
    8:04 the fool proof interval
    10:48 Patreon

КОМЕНТАРІ • 244

  • @emanuelborges4458
    @emanuelborges4458 Місяць тому +218

    Writing "Satisfying" in any youtube video title is the easiest way to hook your audience, no matter the content. Well done.

    • @LENITYZONE
      @LENITYZONE Місяць тому +13

      Best part is that it’s not clickbait 🙏🏽

    • @GizzyDillespee
      @GizzyDillespee Місяць тому +9

      ...and the reason will SHOCK you!!

    • @dylankrejci9965
      @dylankrejci9965 Місяць тому +8

      @@GizzyDillespee(GONE WRONG!!!)

    • @dominicekezie2011
      @dominicekezie2011 Місяць тому

      @@dylankrejci9965(NOT CLICKBAIT)

    • @VirtualModular
      @VirtualModular Місяць тому +4

      Just use this ONE TRICK for INSANE chord progressions....it's the circle of 5ths 😅

  • @b00ts4ndc4ts
    @b00ts4ndc4ts Місяць тому +144

    I just bought myself a keyboard after watching many of these uploads and I am really enjoying my new music journey.

    • @DavidBennettPiano
      @DavidBennettPiano  Місяць тому +41

      That's awesome!

    • @rodeofrancisco6130
      @rodeofrancisco6130 Місяць тому +8

      tbh, SAME HERE haha. I've been playing guitar for so long but most "music theory" videos are showcasing piano.

    • @victorwilburn8588
      @victorwilburn8588 Місяць тому +7

      @@rodeofrancisco6130: Keyboard is the easiest instrument for visualizing theory concepts since things are laid out linearly and visually in a diatonic pattern (the black/white key pattern). It also makes it a great composition instrument, since it's easy to move fingers up and down to discover things. (Guitar has some of these properties as well, though not to the same degree as keyboard.) For these reasons, I recommend any musician to learn at least a little piano. (I'm more of a guitar player myself, though I do spend some practice time on piano.)

  • @beatrixwickson8477
    @beatrixwickson8477 Місяць тому +51

    Thinking of B11 as A/B is really helpful. I'd watch a whole video on how to think of extensions that way because that's just how I conceptualise that stuff.

    • @tljmusic
      @tljmusic Місяць тому +4

      Agreed! David we’d love to see that!

    • @brazilianknuckles7900
      @brazilianknuckles7900 Місяць тому

      Yeah, I try to think for example of 9th chords as a 7th chord+ a bass root and it's a very quick way

    • @sihtambelac
      @sihtambelac Місяць тому

      This one he did on March 17, 2022 may just be what you're looking for. ua-cam.com/video/_GXLqQ6z6z8/v-deo.htmlsi=rFOT1JYGLWKyZPU1

    • @callumhoward1976
      @callumhoward1976 Місяць тому +1

      Or a Sus13 chord is the 1 & 5 with left hand, then the maj7 of the note a whole tone below with right hand. example Asus13 would be A & E with left hand - Gmaj7 with right hand

  • @wolfrayet25music_official
    @wolfrayet25music_official Місяць тому +27

    9:21 this chord has a special name. It's called a "NEAPOLITAN CHORD" which is a spicy subdominant chord that leads really nicely to the V of any key.
    I want to see songs that use that kind of chord.

    • @iorch82
      @iorch82 Місяць тому

      Planet of new orleans by dire straits use it extensively

    • @user-ku2le2xr4z
      @user-ku2le2xr4z Місяць тому

      Is this always a major chord like the Bb here?

    • @frankjuggaloheathen1035
      @frankjuggaloheathen1035 Місяць тому +2

      It could also be thought of as a Phrygian chord, as it contains the flattened 2nd degree

    • @user-ku2le2xr4z
      @user-ku2le2xr4z Місяць тому

      Interesting. Thanks👍

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 Місяць тому +33

    David plays songs that use these chords, but then he gets to Stevie Wonder.
    Stevie is on another level.

  • @klaushoward9158
    @klaushoward9158 Місяць тому +21

    That first sequence I call the "Mama, just killed a man" progression

  • @waterPsychiatrist
    @waterPsychiatrist Місяць тому +49

    Didn't expect MCR here!

    • @NomeDeArte
      @NomeDeArte Місяць тому +3

      Martian Congressional Republic?? Yeah, I am with the Belters all along. F#c% inners!

    • @Finch460
      @Finch460 Місяць тому

      That’s when I shut it off.

    • @eddieloujones2673
      @eddieloujones2673 Місяць тому

      Never heard them before. Man they sound terrible.

    • @waterPsychiatrist
      @waterPsychiatrist Місяць тому +3

      @@eddieloujones2673 objectively wrong, Gerard Way is an inspiration to vocalists all throughout the world

    • @luciabee
      @luciabee Місяць тому +2

      me neither, i was so excited to see them come up

  • @goodlookingcorpse
    @goodlookingcorpse Місяць тому +21

    I find these chord progression videos very helpful. I get a song out of most of them.

  • @zzzaphod8507
    @zzzaphod8507 Місяць тому +8

    For variety, could also lean into the secondary dominant side more with all major or dominant 7th chords, like C A7 D7 G7 on a loop

  • @Fexxis_
    @Fexxis_ Місяць тому +5

    i was not expecting to be weezered by david benett piano

  • @wellurban
    @wellurban Місяць тому +17

    Nicely done! The 6-2-5-1 changes are ubiquitous in jazz, of course, but I think what makes this work especially well in a pop context is that the first change is from the major root to its parallel minor, so it feels like not much of a change at all. This makes it a very smooth introduction, and an easy way to get onto the circle of 5ths to take us home.

    • @Clarity-808
      @Clarity-808 Місяць тому

      Great point!

    • @dftweedie3021
      @dftweedie3021 Місяць тому +1

      Don't we mean 'relative' minor?

    • @wellurban
      @wellurban Місяць тому

      @@dftweedie3021Drat, yes!

    • @dftweedie3021
      @dftweedie3021 Місяць тому

      @@wellurbanWe knew what you meant to say ... but we don't want to confuse others. Can't tell you how many times I've done similar.

  • @consultant_of_swing2146
    @consultant_of_swing2146 Місяць тому +11

    For 60 years my musical tastes have run toward hard and progressive rock, but it's nice to be reminded that "Killing Me Softly With His Song" is just a beautiful, beautiful song.

  • @carrieyael2205
    @carrieyael2205 Місяць тому +7

    I'm also a big fan of i-IIIb-VIIb-iv, which uses fifths going up. I think it's similar to Wonderwall, except the last chord is minor.

  • @carlosgravy7966
    @carlosgravy7966 Місяць тому +9

    Best musical info on the net!

  • @yisroelmeth
    @yisroelmeth Місяць тому +6

    movin out, the opening from the Stranger- Billy Joel

  • @JontCarr
    @JontCarr 7 днів тому +1

    What a brilliant lesson! Thank you.

  • @luciabee
    @luciabee Місяць тому

    WOW, so many bangers in here. i never would have made the connection. and now i not only recognize it but understand why it works! amazing!!!

  • @mikenco
    @mikenco Місяць тому +2

    I've been learning Ukulele for the last 18 months. The information I get from your videos about music theory is exceptional. You're a great teacher, thank you.

  • @joeturkos6767
    @joeturkos6767 Місяць тому +1

    I can’t thank you enough for your videos.
    I’m a guitar student in Chicago, Illinois. I’ve learned so much about music and how it works, through your videos.
    Thank you helping me learn and grow as a guitar player and musician. Cheers!

  • @ziernaht.
    @ziernaht. Місяць тому +2

    THIS LOVE MENTIONED!!!!! ❤

  • @1oolabob
    @1oolabob Місяць тому +5

    I understood all of this the way you explained it. I feel like this is a major milestone for me in understanding music theory, because I've spent so much time not really understanding a lot of it.
    But the real mind-blowing part of this video is something I really didn't expect:
    I have never wanted any virtual instrument until you said "sympathetic resonance".
    Potential advertisers need to know that you're really good at showing people why they would want the product.

  • @ericsiegel1087
    @ericsiegel1087 Місяць тому +5

    great video! would love to see one about why 7ths and upper chord extensions can be useful for building chord progressions in general

  • @atrus3823
    @atrus3823 Місяць тому +1

    I’m super fond of the basic same progression but starting from the third note of the major version.

  • @frankzelazko
    @frankzelazko Місяць тому +3

    spot on! we need to practise the last chord progression

  • @rockhead11
    @rockhead11 Місяць тому

    I’ve been listening to this chord progression since I was a little boy listening to doo-wop. There had to have been 100 top 40 songs in the 50s following that progression. All of them were great!

  • @zzzaphod8507
    @zzzaphod8507 Місяць тому +21

    Was that 4 seconds of a real Beatles song? Is that a copyright gamble?!

    • @DavidBennettPiano
      @DavidBennettPiano  Місяць тому +16

      Shhhhh!! Keep it down!! 😋😅😅😅

    • @waltdoherty540
      @waltdoherty540 Місяць тому

      Probably not. You are allowed to quote short passages, say about.4 bars or less, especially to demonstrate examples of what's being talked about.

  • @YingwuUsagiri
    @YingwuUsagiri Місяць тому +5

    At this rate I would've squeezed in the ii V I as the "step 1" for why this works. It's everywhere because it works and this is an extension of it.

    • @DavidBennettPiano
      @DavidBennettPiano  Місяць тому +4

      Well I would say it’s the other way around… the reason the 2-5-1 works is because it’s all perfect fifths 🙂

    • @YingwuUsagiri
      @YingwuUsagiri Місяць тому +1

      @@DavidBennettPiano True! That's why I said this video is an extension to the 2-5-1 because this *adds* the minor third in front of it as an "extra" to create the progression.

  • @Henrix1998
    @Henrix1998 Місяць тому +10

    Very sneaky the lick

  • @umbertoyltp
    @umbertoyltp Місяць тому +6

    Nice to see Dusty Springfield among the examples!❤

  • @andrewhertzberg6889
    @andrewhertzberg6889 Місяць тому +12

    Really really good - as always.

  • @artrogers3985
    @artrogers3985 Місяць тому +2

    Very good video. Great explanation of a simple thing. You make it very interesting 🎸

  • @pauleuro123
    @pauleuro123 Місяць тому +1

    I'm a guitar player and I find your channel musically very insigtful for playing the guitar. Also I'm very tempted to start learning the keyboard.

  • @southsideronnie
    @southsideronnie 28 днів тому

    Great information. Thank you David!!

  • @DreamsongsProductions
    @DreamsongsProductions Місяць тому

    As a songwriter I commend you on this video and all other chord progression videos. Well done!

  • @moma5232
    @moma5232 Місяць тому

    i love this man.❤❤

  • @WillyJohnes
    @WillyJohnes Місяць тому +6

    You are always very good to explain theory! good job

  • @RaulCastrogeneris
    @RaulCastrogeneris Місяць тому

    Amaizing, it all makes sense now jajaja. Thank you Very Much

  • @c0nga
    @c0nga Місяць тому

    it's extremely convenient that you uploaded this three days before i started trying to write a progression

  • @francisfrozen7076
    @francisfrozen7076 Місяць тому +2

    Oh, I've been waiting for this video for an eternity xD
    There is one more progression that sounds very similar to these two, it will appear if you change the "ii" with the "IV" and get "vi IV V I", for example "Am F G C".
    I've learned about it about a half-year ago, when discovered Hatsune Miku's song "Irony", performed by Majiko in particular. I just fell in love with this chord progression bc I personally prefer it strongly if compared to pretty common "vi IV I V". Very satisfying sound imo.
    Then I started to dig for another songs with this very progression and, to my deepest disappointment, just could not find many of them, especially in Western music. In asian songs it is not very common too, but still used, and in Western music the only example with exactly these chords (i. e. "vi IV V I") in exactly these positions I found was "Stan" by "Eminem".
    So this video finally makes me happy about it, bc "ii" and "IV" chords in this case sound so similar that you can, for example, play "IV" instead of "ii" in "Cruel Angel's Thesis" and difference will be so subtle with all the context.
    (Sorry for my bad English btw)

  • @martingifford5415
    @martingifford5415 Місяць тому

    Am F Bb sounded so Grand!

  • @Kyubiwan
    @Kyubiwan Місяць тому +2

    Nice vid! I'll try to give you some more examples of pop songs with the viidim chord soon so that you can make a video about them!

  • @thepostapocalyptictrio4762
    @thepostapocalyptictrio4762 Місяць тому

    The “ Isn’t she lovely” had what I call the “Lydian riff”. I-II-V-I. Like “ You Don’t See Me” or “Saturday in the Park”. The use of the C# minor for the first I is beautiful.

  • @assassinave
    @assassinave Місяць тому +3

    I suppose you were avoiding it to feature others, but You Never Give Me Your Money by the Beatles initial verse is an example of the minor version. (for those putting concepts to practice)

  • @dugl
    @dugl Місяць тому +1

    yay thanks for Queen example

  • @wyattstevens8574
    @wyattstevens8574 Місяць тому +7

    I brought "Heart & Soul" up because it's more like a beginner-level duet, but my friends and I use the following progression under the melody: I vi IV V I vi ii V (2 rotations without the melody)
    12:10 sounded like Aimee Nolte's "internalize the circle" video!

    • @user-qb3ki5ki1h
      @user-qb3ki5ki1h Місяць тому

      just make sure to use the Dm7 for the ii chord to replicate a F6 chord

  • @lesgoe8908
    @lesgoe8908 Місяць тому

    Excellent

  • @garythomas738
    @garythomas738 Місяць тому

    Cheers for putting it right at the front. That way I know to jump straight out of your video instead of leaving halfway through. I’m not watching ads when I pay for Premium.

  • @carolm.ferreira3699
    @carolm.ferreira3699 Місяць тому

    😊😊❤ awesome video!!

  • @philj4417
    @philj4417 Місяць тому

    hi, I love your videos, I always learn something. :) as a newbie, it's sometimes hard to follow how the chords relate to each other without stave notation, e.g. which notes the 9 and the 11 really are, but great video altogether, keep up the good work

  • @emirbabapro78
    @emirbabapro78 Місяць тому +5

    I love your videos

  • @TotalMonsense
    @TotalMonsense Місяць тому +1

    I recalled Charles Cornell explaining how he used the V-I method to make the infamous IMAGINE cover (by Gadot et al.) work 😁

  • @rini6
    @rini6 Місяць тому +2

    Since everyone is talking about Dune 2. Maybe do an analysis of Hans Zimmer’s soundtrack which was amazing.

  • @MrEspilon
    @MrEspilon Місяць тому

    that is litteraly the chord progression i chose yesterday to start a new track ahah

  • @donkerbot
    @donkerbot Місяць тому

    10:24 We did this in a song. The song itself was in C major, but we transposed to F for the bridge, and the progression was just the circle of fifths, so F - Bb - Eb - Ab - Dd. But then, theoretically, we were in a completely different key anyway, so we simply transposed it back to C, with a semitone up going to form a II-V-I, so finishing with D - G - C, which took me back to the key of C for the outro.
    The song is our 2023 Christmas single, _Christmas in Liverpool._

  • @JMaxfield09
    @JMaxfield09 Місяць тому +4

    More examples of vi-ii-V-I:
    "Rocky Raccoon" & "You Never Give Me Your Money" by the Beatles
    "Saturday in the Park" by Chicago
    "Barbie Girl" by Aqua
    "Spinning Wheel" by Blood, Sweat & Tears
    "Home Movies Theme" by Brendan Small
    "Daughters" by John Mayer

  • @baconlabs
    @baconlabs Місяць тому +1

    With every one of these videos I watch, I become more and more convinced that I need a laminated circle of fifths diagram to hang on my wall.

    • @mat992
      @mat992 Місяць тому +1

      Good idea. It has helped me a lot. I have found that you really need to just drill it. Try to memorize it. Drawing it out on paper helped me internalize it mostly.
      Starting from F and moving in fifths to the right:
      Father
      Charles
      Goes
      Down
      And
      Ends
      Battle
      That covers more than half of the circle,
      have fun :)

    • @baconlabs
      @baconlabs Місяць тому

      I never heard that mnemonic before, thanks mate!

  • @orchestrate
    @orchestrate Місяць тому

    T.Rex's "Whatever Happened to the Teenage Dream" also uses the first progression. as soon as you played it my head started to get boggly until I kept playing the progression until I found it.

  • @ssaamil
    @ssaamil Місяць тому +6

    Soon million subs!

  • @user-jc7jk4ce9t
    @user-jc7jk4ce9t Місяць тому

    Billy Joel's For the Long Night with You all built on satisfying fifths...

  • @ChamilawarnaJayalath
    @ChamilawarnaJayalath Місяць тому

    great video

  • @user-ut3bo7ij6n
    @user-ut3bo7ij6n Місяць тому +1

    Спасибо друг.

  • @BobPaulGuitar
    @BobPaulGuitar Місяць тому

    David, please analyze the simple but very emotional chord progressions in "Starry Night" by Joe Satriani. I loved this song since the first time I've listened to it!

  • @avijatsinharoy8944
    @avijatsinharoy8944 Місяць тому +2

    Here's a progression from me(obviously has been used before tho):
    I-vi-iv-I-I-vi-IV-I
    In the last iteration I have made the penultimate bar as IV-V7(1st inv)

  • @grizzlymartin1
    @grizzlymartin1 Місяць тому

    Can you do, or have you done, a lesson session on building the left hand chord structure underneath a real book lead sheet song? Thx

  • @user-ku2le2xr4z
    @user-ku2le2xr4z Місяць тому

    On some occasions I found the last chord (C Major) of the minor version not to be stable but would literally pull us towards the first chord Am with a passing bass note B

  • @sheenzo
    @sheenzo Місяць тому

    Don't Cry (G&R) uses the 6-2-5-1 progression.

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear2 Місяць тому

    8:10 - 'Am -> Dm -> G - C' also ends in a plagal cadence!

  • @soulubilityofficial6635
    @soulubilityofficial6635 Місяць тому +1

    Hey David! You should do a video on Rhythm Changes!

  • @rome8180
    @rome8180 Місяць тому +2

    Even though they're technically the "same" chord progression, I prefer the vi, ii, V, I version. It sounds less old-fashioned/cheesy to me. Not that I dislike older music. It's just that I, vi, ii, V is maybe the second most common chord progression in '50s music after the I, vi, IV, V. It's a bit played out. The minor version still feels fresher, as common as it is.

  • @danpreston564
    @danpreston564 Місяць тому

    6 2 5 1 is really nicely used in Late Night Talking by Harry Styles.

  • @cappuccino4366
    @cappuccino4366 Місяць тому

    Awesome video. I would like to learn something about this chord progression: for example Em - Eb major
    I don't know how it's called.
    I haven't seen someone made a video about it.

  • @Raymaster7482
    @Raymaster7482 Місяць тому

    The minor version of this progression is used in songs I really don't like very much - interesting!

  • @jaywinterbrook
    @jaywinterbrook Місяць тому

    This is my first progression that I haven’t liked. Thanks for posting.

  • @Enr227
    @Enr227 6 днів тому

    David, please discuss the fade-out of Joe Jackson's "Breaking Us in Two".

  • @rufus4452
    @rufus4452 Місяць тому

    It seems that VI II V I (with the very similar II V I IV) is becoming the new Axis chord progression. After the exploit of As it was and Flowers I hear it everywhere...

  • @rafaele.zavalacamero3099
    @rafaele.zavalacamero3099 Місяць тому +1

    Hey David! Have you ever done a video of the extend versión of that progresión? i - iv - VII - III - VI - ii° - V7 - i

  • @jcong000
    @jcong000 Місяць тому

    The classic Kakariko Village theme from ALTTP uses this progression

  • @leonhardeuler675
    @leonhardeuler675 Місяць тому +1

    Could you talk about how it sounds particularly nice to go from the V to I (G to C), but it's not necessarily the same thing with C to G. C to G is still a perfect fifth, but it doesn't have that same quality. C to G is a perfect fourth of course, but why is it that it must go down the piano to get that effect?

  • @magnusjensson8199
    @magnusjensson8199 Місяць тому

    All strong chord progressions - down a third and up a fourth.

  • @zacharyleonard9413
    @zacharyleonard9413 Місяць тому

    I was playing around on guitar the other day and I tried just rearranging the classic Andalusian cadence. I got i VI VII V and it sounded pretty nice. Is there another name for that variation?

  • @joustwave6541
    @joustwave6541 Місяць тому

    Gary Young (drummer for Pavement) put out an absolutely ridiculous (vi-ii-V-I) song in the 90's called "Plantman" and since that was the first song I remember hearing with that chord progression, it's the song I think of whenever I hear it anywhere else. 🤣

  • @andrewlowden322
    @andrewlowden322 Місяць тому +1

    So now we can see why subbing a ii for a IV works technically. (Im guessin the math principle is the same when subbing a iii for V)

  • @otisheckles6249
    @otisheckles6249 Місяць тому

    And you could've kept circling from Gb (en-harmonic) F# to B then E back to home. I was anticipating that lol.

  • @plaudrup
    @plaudrup Місяць тому

    Many songs are build on groups of 4 bars. The I-vi-ii-V progression ends the 4th bar in the dominant chord (V). You cant help going back to tonic chord (I). But then you just start a new progression ... In other words, this is the progression undernearh a lot of songs you just cant stop humming.

  • @stevieroach
    @stevieroach Місяць тому

    You can also extend this to a 5-chord progression by including the iii chord before vi, another downward 5th.

  • @user-gu6nu6rf2u
    @user-gu6nu6rf2u Місяць тому +1

    Liszt’s Liebstraume - one of the most popular works of romanticism era - Aflat - C7 - F7 - B7 - Eflat7 - Aflat

  • @PhantomII-cc8cj
    @PhantomII-cc8cj Місяць тому

    One cool thing you actually forgot is that there's a popular variation that starts on the ii chord, used in songs like I Want To Hold Your Hand and Oh, Pretty Woman

  • @UnshavenStatue
    @UnshavenStatue Місяць тому

    well the upper harmonics of integer ratios will have a lot of constructive interference, and it's not *so* hard to imagine that constructive interference detection is evolutionarily selected for in some way. (try doing a 3:2 pair of pure sine waves, it sounds less good than a "richer" timbre but it still sounds fairly good to most ears)

    • @fromchomleystreet
      @fromchomleystreet Місяць тому

      But what is the evolutionary advantage bestowed by having these particular responses to these combinations of frequencies? How did being able to experience consonance and dissonance in this particular way make it more likely that our ancestors would live long enough to procreate? If it’s evolutionarily selected, then it must have done so in some way.

    • @UnshavenStatue
      @UnshavenStatue Місяць тому

      @@fromchomleystreet i have little idea about the details of constructive interference being useful, but it's certainly true that we like constructive interference more than random interference (on average)

  • @Kevin-zm5og
    @Kevin-zm5og Місяць тому

    David I love your videos but struggling with music theory. Isn't the chord progression 4ths as its going anticlockwise? Is the direction of the circle of 5ths interchangeable? When you show a 5th above A(m) on the keyboard it's E as expected but in the chord progression its Dm? Thanks for posting these interesting videos, very well produced and professional.

  • @TheStickCollector
    @TheStickCollector Місяць тому

    I just hope there are some minor progressions that I can use (or at least modify from here)

  • @alnitaka
    @alnitaka Місяць тому

    How about going two steps in to get ii V I vi, or 2516? That is my favorite progression. Songs with this include Primadonna, Dancing in the Moonlight, Stumblin In, and partially in It Never Rains in Southern California and Give Life Back to Music.

  • @johanandersson8464
    @johanandersson8464 Місяць тому

    David Bennet: Perfect fifths in cord progressions!
    Every accordion player ever: Well, duh.

  • @musiceclipse
    @musiceclipse Місяць тому

    I have long described consonance and dissonance as easy math and hard math. Octave: two to one, fifth: 3 to 2. Easy math.Tritone: six times the 12th root of two. Hard math.

  • @evansox8137
    @evansox8137 Місяць тому

    Any thoughts on moving a 5th away but to notes that are in a part of the chord other than the root? Like generally would it feel as connected having the 5th away move be the 3rd,5th or even 7th of the next chord?

  • @iraklismoschonas5214
    @iraklismoschonas5214 Місяць тому +1

    The first chord progression is used in the song “Earth Angel (Will You Be Mine)”, by The Penguins.

    • @martine.210
      @martine.210 Місяць тому +2

      It is not by Marvin Berry and the Starlighters?

    • @iraklismoschonas5214
      @iraklismoschonas5214 Місяць тому

      @@martine.210 No, it’s a Penguins song.

    • @thedarkdefender7780
      @thedarkdefender7780 Місяць тому +1

      @@iraklismoschonas5214 Marvin Berry and the Starlighters' version is well known too. It was in 'Back To The Future'.

    • @iraklismoschonas5214
      @iraklismoschonas5214 Місяць тому

      @@thedarkdefender7780 What I have not understood yet though is whether Marvin Berry & The Starlighters is a fictional band that just featured in Back To The Future or it’s an actual band.

  • @JohnJohnson-qf2fm
    @JohnJohnson-qf2fm Місяць тому

    Quick question. I get that it's going through the circle of fifths, but if it's going counter clockwise, it would be going in fourths, right? To me, an example of a chord progression going forward in fifths would be Hey Joe.

  • @1stCZbarbershopper
    @1stCZbarbershopper Місяць тому +1

    When are we going to learn about the barbershop harmony? It uses the circie of fifths A LOT.

  • @anonymous-dz7yl
    @anonymous-dz7yl Місяць тому

    When your playing rhe stevie wonder chords are you using inversions? When i watch these types of videos often the right hand doesnt seem to be moving much up and down the keys.

  • @TomMcE
    @TomMcE Місяць тому +3

    The minor version is "I'm a barbie girl in a barbie world"

  • @andercert70
    @andercert70 Місяць тому

    As a thought exercise, what would it be like if one considered chords with upper extensions to be their own independent entity, not a fill in or substitute, but a different if somewhat related chord. Isn't B11 an interesting and different enough sound from B to make it's character different, and won't it function somewhat differently. Move the bass note and the chord could be F#m7add6. I know, I'm weird. :D