DOWNLOAD MY PDF GUIDE TO 50 USEFUL CHORD PROGRESSIONS: joe-luegers-music-academy.ck.page/9fef947214 Check out the Axis of Awesome perform the "Four Chord Song" for more examples of I-V-vi-IV than you ever wanted: ua-cam.com/video/oOlDewpCfZQ/v-deo.html SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL: www.patreon.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy FOLLOW ME FOR THE LATEST NEWS ON CONTENT Facebook: facebook.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy Instagram: instagram.com/joeluegersmusicacademy Website: www.luegerswriter.com/ TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@joeluegersmusicacademy
joe you are the goat bro thank you for everything ; your personality shines through and puts so much into these videos along w the solid work - thank you bro
Great addition to your other ear trainings! I really appreciate that I can listen and learn while away from the keyboard. Perfect for my needs and learning style! Thanks for your passion to share your quality tips and tricks!
Hi! I’ve also got this video with those same 4 chords: Chord Progressions using I, IV, V, and vi Chords - Hands-Free Ear Training 28 ua-cam.com/video/yYBvzcmvKq8/v-deo.html
Million times thank you Joe! I've seen many UA-cam lessons of music theory and I can say bottom of my heart that yours is the best! I've become big fan of yours and I've recommended your channel to music students. Great work, you can be proud of yourself to make impact to so many people who are struggling with "not hearing" the musically things. And I love your sense of humor and visuality in your channel. I'm grateful!
Thanks so much! Very validating to hear. There’s a lot of people like Adam Neely or Rick Beato who talk about music with much better production quality but I’ve noticed almost no channel that give you practical exercises to put things to use.
For sure! I have a script written out for the next, which covers the ii chord. I’m currently in the middle of making a massive ear training video for guitarists, but the that will be my next project.
On 4:56 no flats ofc, but simple i-VI-III-VII, the mistake comes because in relative minor those chord degrees are really flattened but the example represents parallel key and not relative. Also this example is a bit tricky becase it consist two fifts in a row, so it is possible to interpret the last chord as tonic one.
Different countries/universities have different standards on whether or not to display the flats before the chord symbols in minor keys. I used to prefer what you described, but I found that it gets a little cluttered when a song borrows lots of modal chords or has an ambiguous tonality. Because of this, I prefer the system that uses the major scale formula as the default and then adds flats or sharps as needed. I’ve seen this more often with jazz musicians than classical musicians.
@joeluegersmusicacademy thank you for answer, thou for me it doesn't make much sense to flat for example VI (or IV if to look at this from a major perspective) with A tonic because it would mix the 5 and 6 degrees of the scale unless it's a locrian one. So I have feelings that you might misunderstand something.
@@bibaboba-bk9coBy VI- I’m actually referring to a major 6th above the tonic, whether the tonic is major or minor. Jazz and pop music uses a lot of modal interchange, so although this method seems confusing at first it would be more confusing to constantly have to adjust whether or not flats/sharps are added. For example- Joe Satriani has a lot of songs that keep the same tonic but cycle through several different modes. It would be confusing for a III to represent both E and Eb within the same song which alternates between an Ionian and Dorian mode with a C tonic in both. The channel David Bennet Piano uses this same system of labeling- again, it’s more of a popular music/jazz thing.
Thanks so much! I’m putting together the script and exercises now. Keep checking this playlist: Chord Pro - Learn to Play Chord Progressions by Ear ua-cam.com/play/PL40pFkWbVtdmIvdPv3Rv0sCui0oKQ-IX0.html
Yes, all diatonic chords are common, but I’ve recently been keeping an ear out for non vi chords in rock and pop music, and more than half the time they seem to use vi. You’ll see iis all the time in jazz for sure.
I like so much your courses but it's not always easy to folow lessons on you tube. It should be great to create a great e.course with all course with a clear progression. What do you think about that. I should pay for that. Thank you
For sure! I’ve been gradually rolling out exercises on my Patreon which will eventually be made into an E-book and course on something like Skillshare. Hoping to be done this summer. I have a patron under the name “Christian” who left a comment today. Is that you? Hi!
Awesome! Thanks so much for supporting the channel. So yes, courses are the plan. I have a teaching job that takes most of my time, but I’m hoping to finish up a course in June or July.
ii-V? Never heard of it. Just kidding. Yes. Although I would argue that in a list of common chord progressions in pop, vi comes up at least twice as much as ii.
DOWNLOAD MY PDF GUIDE TO 50 USEFUL CHORD PROGRESSIONS: joe-luegers-music-academy.ck.page/9fef947214
Check out the Axis of Awesome perform the "Four Chord Song" for more examples of I-V-vi-IV than you ever wanted: ua-cam.com/video/oOlDewpCfZQ/v-deo.html
SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL: www.patreon.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy
FOLLOW ME FOR THE LATEST NEWS ON CONTENT
Facebook: facebook.com/JoeLuegersMusicAcademy
Instagram: instagram.com/joeluegersmusicacademy
Website: www.luegerswriter.com/
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@joeluegersmusicacademy
Lamento tanto que mi Ingles es tan malo que solo entiendo palabras😢😢😢, esta clase es muy importante para mi aprendisaje
Great ear training knowledge and great sense of humor :). Thanks for making these videos Joe!
Thanks so much!
More chord progression videos please.
My work has made it hard to get a lot of these out, but I’m definitely going to be making a lot more over the summer.
0:47 instant sub for this😂
I’m stuck in UA-cam now. Please help.
joe you are the goat bro thank you for everything ; your personality shines through and puts so much into these videos along w the solid work - thank you bro
This is great! Please carry on with this series!
Working on lesson 3 now! Should be done next week.
Great addition to your other ear trainings! I really appreciate that I can listen and learn while away from the keyboard. Perfect for my needs and learning style! Thanks for your passion to share your quality tips and tricks!
Thanks for watching! Making these is one of the best parts of my day, so I’m glad people are watching.
Great lesson! Are there more of this with those 4 chords please?🙏
Hi! I’ve also got this video with those same 4 chords: Chord Progressions using I, IV, V, and vi Chords - Hands-Free Ear Training 28
ua-cam.com/video/yYBvzcmvKq8/v-deo.html
Thanks a lot, keep up the great work, learning while not watching the screen is top!! 🥇
Thanks for (not) watching!
Million times thank you Joe! I've seen many UA-cam lessons of music theory and I can say bottom of my heart that yours is the best! I've become big fan of yours and I've recommended your channel to music students. Great work, you can be proud of yourself to make impact to so many people who are struggling with "not hearing" the musically things. And I love your sense of humor and visuality in your channel. I'm grateful!
Thanks so much! Very validating to hear. There’s a lot of people like Adam Neely or Rick Beato who talk about music with much better production quality but I’ve noticed almost no channel that give you practical exercises to put things to use.
This is amazing
No, LEARNING is amazing. And so is respecting your elders and obeying traffic symbols.
thanks
Awesome video. Love learning about chord progressions with examples
Thank you!
Thank you
Thank you so very much for this ear training video! The best i have come across.!
Thanks so much! Check out David Bennett Piano’s channel as well, he recently did a few great videos on chord progressions.
Dude's got the best jokes!
Yeah love it too 😂❤❤
If you see your reflection in this comment, seek medical help
@@statueofliberty1132 what u mean?
@@Jhonmayb278 it was one of the jokes on the screen
@@statueofliberty1132 oh
I haven't watch the video yet lol
5:28 okay teared up a bit
Really enjoying your channel
Glad to hear it!
Thanks for a wonderful lesson how we can learn to play and hear the common chord progression in today - You tube music
This is great! Could you create more of this series?
For sure! I have a script written out for the next, which covers the ii chord. I’m currently in the middle of making a massive ear training video for guitarists, but the that will be my next project.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy thanks i really need this, you are super helpful
Excellent! Thanx! 🎉 😂
Very nice video, appreciate it!
Thanks for watching!
Great Thank You !
You bet!
Great vids, great chatter.
On 4:56 no flats ofc, but simple i-VI-III-VII, the mistake comes because in relative minor those chord degrees are really flattened but the example represents parallel key and not relative. Also this example is a bit tricky becase it consist two fifts in a row, so it is possible to interpret the last chord as tonic one.
Different countries/universities have different standards on whether or not to display the flats before the chord symbols in minor keys. I used to prefer what you described, but I found that it gets a little cluttered when a song borrows lots of modal chords or has an ambiguous tonality. Because of this, I prefer the system that uses the major scale formula as the default and then adds flats or sharps as needed. I’ve seen this more often with jazz musicians than classical musicians.
@joeluegersmusicacademy thank you for answer, thou for me it doesn't make much sense to flat for example VI (or IV if to look at this from a major perspective) with A tonic because it would mix the 5 and 6 degrees of the scale unless it's a locrian one. So I have feelings that you might misunderstand something.
@@bibaboba-bk9coBy VI- I’m actually referring to a major 6th above the tonic, whether the tonic is major or minor. Jazz and pop music uses a lot of modal interchange, so although this method seems confusing at first it would be more confusing to constantly have to adjust whether or not flats/sharps are added. For example- Joe Satriani has a lot of songs that keep the same tonic but cycle through several different modes. It would be confusing for a III to represent both E and Eb within the same song which alternates between an Ionian and Dorian mode with a C tonic in both. The channel David Bennet Piano uses this same system of labeling- again, it’s more of a popular music/jazz thing.
Great vid, the exercises were so helpful Do you have something spit these out so you can practice forever?
I love this series! Is the third episode published yet?
Thanks so much! I’m putting together the script and exercises now. Keep checking this playlist: Chord Pro - Learn to Play Chord Progressions by Ear
ua-cam.com/play/PL40pFkWbVtdmIvdPv3Rv0sCui0oKQ-IX0.html
Hello! Do you know how to train the ear in order to hear a lot of notes played simultaneously?
Love your videos, hope you get that pinball machine on a boat!
Thanks a lot! I put too many pinball machines on my boat and it sank. Saving up for a yacht now.
@@joeluegersmusicacademy Oh sweet, get scuba gear and play underwater, the fish will appreciate the cool lighting effects.
ii & iii are really common too
Yes, all diatonic chords are common, but I’ve recently been keeping an ear out for non vi chords in rock and pop music, and more than half the time they seem to use vi. You’ll see iis all the time in jazz for sure.
Joe pleeeease let me get that next episode of chord pro
Yes, that will be the next series I revisit. Expect it probably in January.
I like so much your courses but it's not always easy to folow lessons on you tube. It should be great to create a great e.course with all course with a clear progression. What do you think about that. I should pay for that. Thank you
For sure! I’ve been gradually rolling out exercises on my Patreon which will eventually be made into an E-book and course on something like Skillshare. Hoping to be done this summer. I have a patron under the name “Christian” who left a comment today. Is that you? Hi!
Yes, it was me. I'm a French Jazz guitarist and i need to develop my ear.@@joeluegersmusicacademy
Awesome! Thanks so much for supporting the channel. So yes, courses are the plan. I have a teaching job that takes most of my time, but I’m hoping to finish up a course in June or July.
Schrodinger's tonic? You're an idiot of the right kind. 😂
Great channel. Subbed.
Best compliment I’ve ever gotten.
The Seven Becomes The Three in the Five Chord “ Duality.
So many overlapping elements in music.
"the other minor chords are used far less often"
the ii in ii-V-I :👁👄👁
/light hearted
ii-V? Never heard of it.
Just kidding.
Yes. Although I would argue that in a list of common chord progressions in pop, vi comes up at least twice as much as ii.
I want a pinball machine too...
I’ll let you have it on the weekends.
if it's jazz it's probably the ii chord hahahah
ii-V-I forever
Great vids, great chatter.