Very interesting! The video would be better if the sound is louder. I have to turn it to max to be able to hear when my background noise is at medium level.
Very interesting and well made video! 👍 I had those situations in vocal groups, when even an easy triad did not sound in tune just because of unvoluntary overtones some singers produced. They sang the "right" notes but with dissonant harmonics in the upper frequencies. You really have to get used to hear those tones to fine tune. That's what I love with good vocal groups groups - who can produce those "omg-chords" which blast your brain because of those multiple extra colours they create.🎶🌌
Fascinating!!! Sent it to a bunch of friends who "dabble" in a capella singing ......been a long time since "Go the Distance" (which i must have watched 27,000 times.....lol) 😎😎😎
Hey Danny, I have a question. How to deal with just intonation in jazz vocal music without raising or falling in pitch from the original key of the song? It's what happens all the time in vocal groups. Greetings from Germany
Many jazz chords will be tuned with equal temperament to feel best, but no matter which you use, the root of chords (usually in bass) will will be tuned at 0 and preserve the key of the song. Groups fall flat (or go a sharp) all the time, and don't know if it is necessarily because they are tuning chords JI and it's pulling them flat. The whole group naturally tries to tune to each other and if any of the singers go sharp or flat (especially melody or bass) the other singers adjust to make the chords feel right. I think the tendency to fall flat more often than go sharp is more likely because as voices fatigue it's harder to keep the pitch where it was rehearsed. Another good exercise is to have each singer 'feel' the key of the song while they sing their part. So at any point you could stop and sing back the key center no matter which part you're singing so each person is responsible for keeping the key in check.
Listen to this guy!
Very interesting! The video would be better if the sound is louder. I have to turn it to max to be able to hear when my background noise is at medium level.
Very interesting and well made video! 👍 I had those situations in vocal groups, when even an easy triad did not sound in tune just because of unvoluntary overtones some singers produced. They sang the "right" notes but with dissonant harmonics in the upper frequencies. You really have to get used to hear those tones to fine tune. That's what I love with good vocal groups groups - who can produce those "omg-chords" which blast your brain because of those multiple extra colours they create.🎶🌌
Fascinating!!!
Sent it to a bunch of friends who "dabble" in a capella singing
......been a long time since "Go the Distance" (which i must have watched 27,000 times.....lol)
😎😎😎
Hey, thanks! 27,000 times.. did you notice my error in the transcription yet? :D
This is really helpful! Amazing!
Great job Danny!
Hey Danny, I have a question. How to deal with just intonation in jazz vocal music without raising or falling in pitch from the original key of the song? It's what happens all the time in vocal groups. Greetings from Germany
Many jazz chords will be tuned with equal temperament to feel best, but no matter which you use, the root of chords (usually in bass) will will be tuned at 0 and preserve the key of the song. Groups fall flat (or go a sharp) all the time, and don't know if it is necessarily because they are tuning chords JI and it's pulling them flat. The whole group naturally tries to tune to each other and if any of the singers go sharp or flat (especially melody or bass) the other singers adjust to make the chords feel right. I think the tendency to fall flat more often than go sharp is more likely because as voices fatigue it's harder to keep the pitch where it was rehearsed.
Another good exercise is to have each singer 'feel' the key of the song while they sing their part. So at any point you could stop and sing back the key center no matter which part you're singing so each person is responsible for keeping the key in check.
@@DannyFong thanks for the quick answer
Barbershop tag FTW
Hey man this is a good video keep it up ok
You gained 1000th of a cent in ad revenue while I lost 14 cents on my major third
The nickelback thing actually scared me. I felt unsafe. Great video though.