"Every sound you hear comes from an object that is vibrating. Every vibration has a frequency." WOW. as someone who's been producing, writing music, and recording for 15 years, with a degree in audio engineering, I have never heard it being put so simply!!!
This video is very comprehensive, the visuals are very helpful too. How would the pattern work in different instruments. Is it possible to translate this method to guitar, uke, etc? I'd like to see a part two. Thanks a lot
Hi Alien. Thanks for watching. The pattern works with all instruments, it's just taking the time to learn where the notes are on each instrument. The piano is the easiest to explain this because the notes are easy to see. We'll definitely consider translating this to guitar and uke!
I've been playing piano for 10 years, and only now i understand in the minutes of your video how a scale, starting elsewhere than C, really works. This is the end of my suffering. Thank you & greetings from Vlaanderen in Belgium !
I joined music class and then man who is in charge send this in the group and it helps soo much I tried it with my guitar and it help so when I get there tonight ..He will be AMAZED
I just starting to learn piano and guitar! Every time I heard someone say “play this in c major” or something to that extent, I had absolutely no idea what they were talking about and made me feel like a noob! Very informative video!
This was immensely useful. I always tried to learn things about scales but it never quite sat right. This is the first thing that I’ve ever watched where why flat/sharp can be the same key but a seemingly different note by name. Explained very well here, thank you!
Thank you! This was extremely helpful. I had a very negative experience in school being taught this and it left me quietly anxious about my knowledge - a mental block had fallen over me and yet I was still singing and playing instruments and pretty good at sight reading and playing by ear. So I felt like an imposter because I was skilled but so ignorant. This simple, cheerful video gave me my lightbulb moment. Thank you.
Excellent lesson, very professional video, and fun. Really accessible, and able too take complex things and describe it in simple language, isn't easy.
A very helpful video for non-musicians trying to understand composer-speak for a fiction novel. Thank you as Christmas Carol is the centrepiece of the novel. Keeping UA-cam simple.
A note in a higher octave will be double the frequency of the same note in a lower octave. ie C4 = 262HZ and C5 = 262 x 2 HZ (hertz is cycles per second)
Excellent! I am amazed at the spontaneity of your explanation. It's really so clear that any common man can also understand the music content. Thank you LANDR.❤️
I'm teaching myself guitar in quarantine and in my gap year before uni. Thank you so much! This clears a lot of things and I'll definitely check out other of your videos to enhance my musical knowledge. Although I was still confused with the white keys being semitones.
OH MY GOODNESS!!!! Thank you SO MUCH i have been breaking my brain on multiple videos nlt understanding some of the explaination and your video is so helpful !!! It cleared so many mistunderstanding and questions
omg I just found you here on UA-cam, I've learned more in twelve minutes than trying for months to create my own sounds for a song...thank you, I'll be a regular.
Thanks Peggy. Im learning the clarinet and this scale concept, I just found baffling until you explained it. Now I can crack on with my F and G major scales Cheers!!
You called a half step , a step , more than once , earlier . I guess you just meant STEP to mean , to go to the NEXT note., because later on , you said it correctly. You should be consistent so people do NOT get confused .
Should make videos explaining why the names of some notes changes in some scales like they are called used flat instead of sharp. Is there a fixed chords to a melody or it depends on us and open to variations (and to what degree)- that's my biggest question nobody has answered.
Great video, thanksa million. However at 1:20 you say "sharps raise a note by one step and flats lower a note by ne step".... pretty sure that should be a "half-step" instead of "one-step" (as per explanation at 2:20) ?
This got me farther by far than countless sites and other videos trying to understand why scales were what they were. One question though: why in the 'don't use this version' explaining why we start with flats in scales, not sharps, does the sample wrong version keep the sharps on the whole steps, but the correct version not keep the flats? (EX it went D#, E# but in flats it went E flat, F)
What topic should Peggy cover next?
I wanna learn some guitar if possible
LANDR minor:)
Adding that to the list...
#sadmusic
@EVOLVING SUNS AUDIO in UK that is, but in US it is called whole steps/half steps
This is exactly how music theory should be taught . Great job
Exactly 😺
no boring
Brilliant explanation. I get it!
@@messianic_scam well, that is becoz she is a pretty woman and knows how to talk. :)
Agreed
Thank you, you taught me 2 years of high school in just 6 minutes.
OMG Peggy, I'm 60 yrs old and you just taught me what in 6 mins. what I been trying to comprehend for years.......I love you....!
Thanks so much.....!
You are so welcome. So glad to hear it!!
"Every sound you hear comes from an object that is vibrating. Every vibration has a frequency." WOW. as someone who's been producing, writing music, and recording for 15 years, with a degree in audio engineering, I have never heard it being put so simply!!!
You are the first musical person who has suggested that the Alphabet starts with the letter A. Thank You!
“Every sound you hear comes from an object that is vibrating!”
“My psychiatrist says otherwise.”
oh no
Spiritually..also true.
Lol
This video is very comprehensive, the visuals are very helpful too. How would the pattern work in different instruments. Is it possible to translate this method to guitar, uke, etc? I'd like to see a part two. Thanks a lot
Hi Alien. Thanks for watching. The pattern works with all instruments, it's just taking the time to learn where the notes are on each instrument. The piano is the easiest to explain this because the notes are easy to see. We'll definitely consider translating this to guitar and uke!
Hi
Yes, please! I'm learning to play a ukulele, my first instrument.
I've been playing piano for 10 years, and only now i understand in the minutes of your video how a scale, starting elsewhere than C, really works. This is the end of my suffering. Thank you & greetings from Vlaanderen in Belgium !
I joined music class and then man who is in charge send this in the group and it helps soo much I tried it with my guitar and it help so when I get there tonight ..He will be AMAZED
Amazing! Glad it helped
I just starting to learn piano and guitar! Every time I heard someone say “play this in c major” or something to that extent, I had absolutely no idea what they were talking about and made me feel like a noob! Very informative video!
The half step and the whole step pattern thing made it easier and I'm happy that I found this video from my recommendation, I can't believe it!
Can you do minor as well? Your lessons are very informative
Awesome idea!
You asked, we delivered! ua-cam.com/video/lzLkebsh0TY/v-deo.html
@@LANDRmusic and we love it!
This was immensely useful. I always tried to learn things about scales but it never quite sat right. This is the first thing that I’ve ever watched where why flat/sharp can be the same key but a seemingly different note by name. Explained very well here, thank you!
Best 6 minutes I spent of my day. Thank you much.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you! This was extremely helpful. I had a very negative experience in school being taught this and it left me quietly anxious about my knowledge - a mental block had fallen over me and yet I was still singing and playing instruments and pretty good at sight reading and playing by ear. So I felt like an imposter because I was skilled but so ignorant.
This simple, cheerful video gave me my lightbulb moment. Thank you.
Excellent lesson, very professional video, and fun. Really accessible, and able too take complex things and describe it in simple language, isn't easy.
That's awesome. Thanks for the feedback!
Your very welcome, I'll enjoy checking out other vids and I'll try and get the fundamentals back in my hamster 🐹 brain.
A very helpful video for non-musicians trying to understand composer-speak for a fiction novel. Thank you as Christmas Carol is the centrepiece of the novel. Keeping UA-cam simple.
Absolutely brilliant. I wanted so hard to learn the basic yet "hearing all the time" theory of music. Thanks a lot for this. I'm very happy
Glad it was helpful!
Wow, Scales are like a color palette, explains it so well. Especially if I am a graphic designer trying to learn music. Thank you!
Wow you’re an angel! You taught me more than I learned about music theory scavenging the internet for the last couple of months 💖
Glad to hear it Nahid!!
I think this gonna be my favourite youtuberbut i can't express i have just a word that I understood
*I'm watching this for the first time and you are such a genius.*
OMG! where have you been all my life! Blessings!
The WWHWWWH really helped me find the correct key to do adlibs in. Thanks for that tip!
A note in a higher octave will be double the frequency of the same note in a lower octave. ie C4 = 262HZ and C5 = 262 x 2 HZ (hertz is cycles per second)
Thanks. Useful video. She highlights things others won't, others won't even mention.
Thank you ma'am
Am a beginner...you are an amazing teacher .... subscribed...thank you mam
I am completely new to notes, scales, and basically all music outside of drums, and you explained this very well!
Glad to hear it Kace!
Excellent!
I am amazed at the spontaneity of your explanation. It's really so clear that any common man can also understand the music content. Thank you LANDR.❤️
Merci for this. I liked your demonstration of D# since I knew about it but wasn't sure of which scales were problematic.
A VERY NICE METHOD OF TEACHING SO THAT THE SLOW STUDENTS CAN ALSO GRASP AND LEARN.YOU ARE DOING A WORK OF PRAIZE FOR WHICH YOU WILL GET A BOON.
I LOVE YOU everything clicked in my brain thank you so much you are brilliant
Finally it all makes sense. Thank you!
These are the comments we live for! Glad to hear it.
Thank YOU! You have explained this the easiest way possible.
I have been confused about this for a while now. You made it so simple for me
I'm so glad!
I'm teaching myself guitar in quarantine and in my gap year before uni. Thank you so much! This clears a lot of things and I'll definitely check out other of your videos to enhance my musical knowledge. Although I was still confused with the white keys being semitones.
That 6 minutes helped me more than the 30 minutes video I watched before!
Glad to hear it!!
OH MY GOODNESS!!!! Thank you SO MUCH i have been breaking my brain on multiple videos nlt understanding some of the explaination and your video is so helpful !!! It cleared so many mistunderstanding and questions
Very nicely explained... In simple language!
you know, you are the best! The way you explain is incredible
This is refresher for. Some parts were confusing, but I’m sure I’ll get it with practice.
Definitely takes time!
You explained scales better than 1 year of music school 👏🏻
Great video
Thanks.
I need more and more videos on composing songs o different emotions
You are a good teacher. You deserve a lot more subscribers.. Thank you.. God bless..
Thank you, thank you sooooop much, out of the 3 videos I watched today, this is the only one that explains the best and I finally understood.
Gracias 🙏🏾 you’re a great teacher of music
omg I just found you here on UA-cam, I've learned more in twelve minutes than trying for months to create my own sounds for a song...thank you, I'll be a regular.
Ahh, glad to have you! What a wonderful comment.
Thanks Peggy. Im learning the clarinet and this scale concept, I just found baffling until you explained it. Now I can crack on with my F and G major scales
Cheers!!
That's so awesome this helped you with your clarinet playing. Clarinet is a beautiful instrument.
@@LANDRmusic thanks! yeah it is a nice instrument. Im learning it for the blues and jazz side of things.
It's a great instrument for jazz for sure! My favourite jazz clarinetist is Eddie Daniels. ua-cam.com/video/O2ayaC4TaKs/v-deo.html
Good Job❤
For the first time I understood flat and sharp scales' names. Thanks!
You're amazing thank you!
Lovely it was well done thanks so you have any other videos. God bless you
Thanks for watching. Check out this playlist for similar videos: ua-cam.com/play/PL21Q42X3VpTspw92DrTVuhx3GetvGeqmq.html
Thanks, this tutorial taught me that it can be pretty huge and overwhelming!
You called a half step , a step , more than once , earlier . I guess you just meant STEP to mean , to go to the NEXT note., because later on , you said it correctly. You should be consistent so people do NOT get confused .
Girl this was an excellent tutorial!
Yo she looked baked lol all good I'm baked too 😂
2020 vision.
Still baked in 2021...
Great video You have explained it in easer way .
Wow, this was very well edited and very well explained. Very helpful, thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for making it easy to build a base of understanding with this info!
Thank you and love yr simple yet clear teaching. Awesome
this video is so good, im very invested
Nice and soft axplained God bless you.
Understood easily!! Thank you!
You explained that perfectly, i understood everything with ease and i thank you for that🤘
You're very welcome!
Amazzzing teaching ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥, Understanding the basics made easier ❤️🔥
Peggy is the reason I watch this lol, nice explanation LANDR! 💯
best tutorial i`ve watched love u
You made it easy to learn and it helped me a lot 💜
I'm so glad!
Should make videos explaining why the names of some notes changes in some scales like they are called used flat instead of sharp. Is there a fixed chords to a melody or it depends on us and open to variations (and to what degree)- that's my biggest question nobody has answered.
Video in the works for flats VS sharps ;)
Thank you sweet Peggy. You make learning fun and easy🥰🥰🥰
This lesson was awesome!!!
This was so confusing before this video, this genuinely taught me so much, thank you
I'm so glad!
Thank you. Excellent video.
Glad it was helpful!
I like how u explained it!
I want to see more synth building with this info
thanks , very good tuto ,
an advanced chord tuto like neosoul , harmony tuto will be great explain by Peggy im sure :)
That's a great idea.
Thank u so much for this video❤ could u tell me the difference between scale and key?
Thank u, lots of love and respect
this was juuuust slow enough to let me understand it :P great editing btw! thank you so much!
Glad it helped!
Best vdo on this topic :)
Thanks a lot mam
Thank u for covering this topic!
So good. Quick and to the point. Thank you.
Best tutorial no doubt
Great Session!! Very clear and easy to follow. Peace
Thanks for watching!
Finaly!, Now i understand music scale, greate teacher , Thanks alot Peggy, :)
You're very welcome!
The best tutorial! Perfectly explained! Thank you very much 🙏❤
Thank you so much. Very informative.
Good lesson, very clear but at 1:20 you say sharps raise a note by one step and flats lower a note by one step. They move the note by a half step.
Noted!
Great video, thanksa million. However at 1:20 you say "sharps raise a note by one step and flats lower a note by ne step".... pretty sure that should be a "half-step" instead of "one-step" (as per explanation at 2:20) ?
Amazing teaching
Thank youu this is fun and clear to understand
Tq giving this knowledge love from Assam ❤
how can one not love Peggy- so charismatic!! love your Content Guys @LANDR
Peggy is the best ever!! Thanks for the comment :)
0:35 guitar melody is awesome...what r the notes?
Thank you for sharing your knowledge 🙏
that was explained so good, thanks a lot for it
You're good. I hope I'll find a video for learning chords
This got me farther by far than countless sites and other videos trying to understand why scales were what they were. One question though: why in the 'don't use this version' explaining why we start with flats in scales, not sharps, does the sample wrong version keep the sharps on the whole steps, but the correct version not keep the flats? (EX it went D#, E# but in flats it went E flat, F)
WWH method was genuis thank you