Triads/Chords - Hands-Free Ear Training 21

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  • Опубліковано 19 бер 2024
  • These ear-training exercises will help you tell apart the most common triads: major, minor, augmented, and diminished chords. The full playlist is available on my Patreon for 1$ with audio downloads, but will gradually be made available on this channel for free. See below for links and a listener's guide.
    LESSONS 1-3 OF MY EAR TRAINING COURSE ARE NOW FREE ON PATREON: / 90196
    FREE UA-cam PLAYLIST: • Hands-Free Ear Training
    It can be easy to get overwhelmed when it comes to chords. But here's the thing: most chords you hear will probably be major, followed by minor in a close 2nd. If you can tell those apart, then you've got a valuable skill. Augmented triads are relatively uncommon except in jazz, and diminished triads are almost unheard of because they are usually fully fleshed out as a 7th chord. However, being able to hear these 4 triads is still a useful skill because they form the foundation of just about every other chord.
    Major Chord - Begins with a major 3rd and then ascends up to a perfect 5th above the root. Major = Happy is a huge oversimplification. Instead, I call major chords "bright."
    Minor Chord - Begins with a minor 3rd and then ascends up to a perfect 5th above the root. Again, Minor does not equal "sad". Think Minor = Dark.
    Augmented Chord - Two consecutive major 3rds. The root up to the sharp 5th is an augmented 5th (same as a minor 6th). This is known as a linear chord because it is the same interval stacked continuously. You sometimes see the V chord in a song substituted as an augmented chord, especially in minor keys. You also sometimes see the 5th note in a major I chord crawl up to sharp 5, forming an augmented chord, which then crawls up again to a 6, forming a minor chord. I
    Diminished Chord - Two consecutive minor 3rds. The root up to the flat 5th is a tritone (also known as a diminished 5th or augmented 4th.) This is known as a linear chord because it is the same interval stacked continuously. Diminished chords hold a lot of tension because every note usually wants to resolve.
    I use the scale method to tell chords apart. If you can sing the first 5 notes of a major scale up and down the chord, it's a major chord. If you can sing the minor scale, it's a minor chord. If you can sing the whole tone scale (all whole steps/ major 2nds), it's an augmented chord. If it's hard to sing a scale, then it's diminished. The octatonic scale works over the diminished chord, which is alternating whole and half steps, but I find this one very unnatural to sing.
    Thanks to @BrandonWalid, Martin Shaw, Tóth Ákos, Austin Kwan, George Ndifreke, and Rafael Belor for proof-watching this video.
    CONTACT: joe@luegerswriter.com
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4

  • @joeluegersmusicacademy
    @joeluegersmusicacademy  2 місяці тому

    LESSONS 1-3 OF MY EAR TRAINING COURSE ARE NOW FREE ON PATREON: www.patreon.com/collection/90196
    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

  • @northernpianomusic
    @northernpianomusic 2 місяці тому +1

    Perfect timing. Thank you! 🙏

  • @leverpostegen1765
    @leverpostegen1765 2 місяці тому +2

    Hey Joe could you make a part 2 to the (exercise to hear every chord) video where the chords are in different keys. That would be super helpful, and also thanks for all the videos you have already made.

  • @helenah6875
    @helenah6875 2 місяці тому

    I love you ❤