I really hate to be pedantic but at 1:30 you talk about how a G and D when played together are not a chord. They are indeed a chord. Playing more than one note at the same time is by definition, a chord. G and D are not a triad, they are a dyad; but still a chord. 2 notes is a dyad, 3 a triad, 4 a tetrad, 5 a pentad, etc.
I personally have lost track of what everyone believes in regards to this, the Theory teacher would tell you two notes together are just an interval instead of a chord
Yep you're right- I've been yelled at by internet theorists for trying to name dyads ("they're just intervals") and my first theory book taught that chords = 3 notes so I've always clung to that interpretation. To be honest I find it a silly definition- I don't know any chord names for 2-note chords that don't reference a triad or interval, so it seems that "chords" all depend on 3 notes and dyads are basically just intervals. However, I'm not entitled to rewrite the language so I should have clarified that. I think the responsible way to phrase that segment would have been "When people say the word 'chord', they're usually talking about something with 3 notes", which is accurate but also teaches the concept without opening up a new can of worms. Thanks for the comment and make sure you call me out next time I over-simplify!
Signals Music Studio my bad man I was just relating to the debate cause I see the argument online (r/musictheory constantly) and I just wanted to add to it. I personally don’t think either way is wrong, and it doesn’t matter to me what someone calls it
Signals Music Studio my bad man I was just relating to the debate cause I see the argument online (r/musictheory constantly) and I just wanted to add to it. I personally don’t think either way is wrong, and it doesn’t matter to me what someone calls it
@@LowdownBoy I was totally going to stay for the theory. I watched the rest of the video a little distracted by the hope that there would be a whole Hetfield Hotel California at the end =P
I've taught guitar for 27 years. Started playing at 15. I'm 64 years old now. I wish I had a teacher like you when I first started. Thank you for your contribution to the guitar playing community. Always informative, entertaining and enthusiastic. And humorous.
For me that totally made seens - in German "ayyyeeeeeee" (we would actually write it "Eier") means balls..... rising up through the balls.... never occurred to me when listening to the original, but now is like the scales fell from my eyes, I mean my balls....
Just wanna say thank you to all 201,000 of you that decided to learn from my videos. I have the best comment section in all of youtube and thats all your fault! Also thank you x100,000 to my patient Patreon subscribers who sponsor these videos. I'm getting a lot of copyright strikes on my videos now so their help is hugely appreciated. now watch this video and rock out!
...soon it will be a copyright infringement just for dropping names like Metallica in your video any where... strike...you typed Metallica scale... strike, you said the name Metallica...shame on us all for giving recognition to bands... holy effing LOL! Great stuff, keep it coming!!!
I really love your videos sirs , but i have a question ? Does learning power chords first is a good first step for learning to play a guitar ? I'm a drummer my whole life and i want to explore more about music. Hope you can read this sir. I'm a fan of your vids
You could do another part on this. Check out Drain You by Nirvana. If you extend the chords out based off the melody you get (tuned down) A(6) C#m(b9) F#m7 Bm / A C#7(b9) F# Bm. It's (inter)changing modally and flirting with the 7th mode of B melodic minor - Bb altered, or super locrian - which doesn't even contain the A which somehow remains at the root. Or don't bother with modes and just try to wrap your head around the complexity and chromaticism of the overall harmonic structure. In any case it's pretty far out stuff and shows just how much you can do with power chords. And that's just one song. Cobain had a gift for that shit that Billie Joe and other latter day punks have never had. They just rewrite Irish rebel songs.
Hey, even a musical diet of just Green Day and Nirvana songs is still a pretty epic representation of the power, ambiguity, and attitude of what power chords are capable of. It becomes more about the energy over the complexity.
I've seen some people say Green Day songs all sound the same, but look at the chill acoustic fingerstyle of Wake Me Up When September Ends, the sad but uplifted dorian mode with tremolos with electric and acoustic effects in Boulevard of Broken Dreams. American Idiot is percussive driven with chops and minimalist but filling sustains. Holiday has the rhythm of the Sith Anthem from Star Wars (which came from Chopin's Marche funèbre and English composer Gustav Holst's Opus 32, The Planets, written between 1914 and 1917,[11] and Grande Marche de Medjidie by August Ritter Von Adelburg) without out being blatant like My Woman by Al Bowlly & Lew Monsignueer Band (better known for the sample Your Woman by White Town but most likely known for the further sample Love Again by Dua Lipa (I don't think that Green Day knew that they used that rhythm just like Ashley McBryde in Radioland, and Weezer in Island On The Sun, the Hotwire commercial jingle, Found A Way from Drake & Josh, but my song You Can Always End It Tomorrow was on purpose). My point is, Green Day actually stood out for me and actually was always my only real example of any mainstream & alternnative pop punk band that has many different sounds
"There's a lot more to power chords than just Green Day and Nirvana songs..." Bruh, I really felt that. As a fan of both bands both lead guitarists inspired me to pick a guitar.
yup for me it was Breaking Benjamin drop d bar chords and Blink 182 power chords that got me started and the more songs I learned to play the better my ear got and now I will just mess around and figure out songs sometimes.
Exactly… look at how diverse the 90’s was for music. Possibly the most diverse decade ever for every genre: grunge, pop-punk, alternative, indie and hip hop etc. So much great music came from the 90’s that had or was their own genre or lived in both, like Rage Against the Machine with sick hyper drop-D riffs or Sublime in the way Brad Nowell blended reggae, punk and blues so melodically
Dude it just feels redundant to say but man thanks so much for the videos you make, you made me fall in love with music theory and your channel's the gift that keeps on giving, you're doing the world of music a service ! :D
I recently started playing my guitars regularly (every day) after a several year break, and man I am sure glad I found your channel! You pulled me out of a long funk of playing everything by ear with very minimal understanding of why. Now I'm reversing engineering everything I know and trying to break bad habits. Thank you for your awesome work!
The 2nd time I've watched this video I've noticed that text. It took me second but then I knew which meme it was referencing 😂 Also the the "2 thirds" joke @ 1:50 very nice 👌✨
This is great information. As an old armchair guitarist, I actually pick out songs with melody lines, and had no clue about two-note "power" chords. Thanks.
Jake, I re-watched this video when I was completely drained of energy after a busy day. This was just the powersurge I needed all day long. You hetfielding almost woke the kids at midnight as I burst out laughing so loud. Btw, excellent presentation of theory - as usual. Thanks!
I keep coming back to this lesson--it's one of the best 15 minute investments a rock guitarist can make. Even if it only helps you with 1 out of 10 chord progressions, that is a major improvement and solves so many of the "this isn't working, I have to try something completely different/shelve it" roadblocks we run into. Thanks again Jake!
People will argue endlessly whether combinations of 1's and 5's should be called a dyad, interval, harmony, or chord. There are experts who can be quoted to support any of these names. When playing a piano, acoustic guitar, or even a horn section, this debate has its place. However, when an instrument is intentionally being distorted by a non-linear signal path, that signal path is really part of the instrument. Playing an electric guitar through a distortion pedal or heavily overdriven amplifier requires a different skill set than playing an acoustic guitar. When intervals composed of 1's and 5's are played with distortion, that is the context when they are called power chords. The distortion naturally adds more notes into the mix. When a combination such as 1-5-1 is played on a distorting instrument, the sounded notes are not just 1-5-1. The distortion adds several new frequencies, and some of these new frequencies are actually the major 3rd. As a simple example, playing 5-1, the inversion where the 5th is just below the root, would normally result in frequencies at 0.75 and 1 times the frequency of the root note. But when playing these two notes on a distorting instrument, distortion products are also naturally produced at frequencies of 0.5 and 1.25 times the original root frequency. The note at 0.5 would be an octave down from the root, and the note at 1.25 is the major 3rd. Now you have a person fingering notes at 5-1 (the 5th and the root), but sounding notes at 1-5-1-3 (0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.25 aka root, 5th, root, 3rd). That is one version of the power chord. Note: There will also be many more distortion products present - especially odd harmonics. Some of these will also be major 3rds.
I just saw an ad for the Encyclopedia of Scales. It claims there are a total of 2048 Scales (no more/no less) and it includes all 2 note intervals as SCALES!!!!
Power Chords are the best on Distortion! Great video to see my man! Knowing this, I will definitely incorporate some more logical and sophisticated playing and utilization in my power chords. Gives new life to them
I REALLY like the approach of teaching "power chords" to beginners. It's super important to know WHY power chords sound good over almost ANYTHING, here are MY two reasons, I hope they help: 1. Learn the circle of 5ths (obviously) WITHOUT thinking too much. Just remember that on guitar, the "5th" is the same FRET as the (root) note you're playing, BUT one string closer to your face. Ea. in C major = 3rd fret on A string (C), and the "5th" is the 3rd fret on the E string. (G). The G is the the fifth of C (tonal center). 2. Introduction to theory! Power chords FORCE the student to play simple phrasing correctly. Otherwise, it just "didn't sound right, etc." around others. Learning MODES and INTERVALS are absolutely ESSENTIAL for ANYONE learning music. GREAT POST!!!
My compliments. I've been teaching for many (too many) years, and this is the best explanation of "power chords" (yeah, I know they're diads) I've seen. And then, the exploration into augmented/diminished 5ths. Well done. Some folks might like this: When I was a kid, I got a Spirograph for Christmas. I soon noticed the gears that had a simple ratio to each other, like 32:64 made simple patterns, but 63:64 made a very complicated pattern. The same thing happens in music: a root and 5 have a 1:1.5 ratio. That makes a simple waveform, practically usable as a single note, as you pointed out. But then other things happen. When you put two frequencies together, you get *more* frequencies. You get one that is the sum of the frequencies, and one that is the difference between them. Example: the "zero beat" you hear when two strings aren't quite on the same note is the difference between the two notes. And then, those new frequencies interact with the originals, and each other, creating lots of other harmonic multiples. As long as the original two notes have a simple ratio like 1:1.5 the spectrum created by those two makes a nice orderly sound. But if the original two are out of tune, or a more dissonant interval, the resulting waves are all over the place, and you get a trashy hash of non-musical frequencies. A guitar in high gain really makes this obvious.
Oooooooh, so THAT'S why my guitar sounded so cool the other day! I found the inverted power chords on string the E and A strings the other day. REALLY got in the way of practicing when I was just jamming out and having fun lol 😆
This is how i always practice. I just play nearly every day. Just what ever sounds good and feels good. I can't be bother to practice scales intentionally or chord progressions haha.
The thing about the diminished power chords was a revelation. I've heard the tritone is used "a lot" in metal, with people pointing back to the riff "Black Sabbath", but that song is far more dissonant that most metal. Learning that the tritones are actually used as the secret to make power chords more tonal than just using fifths explains why most uses of the tritone in metal don't sound dissonant.
After subscribing and watching a few dozen of your videos I thought it was time to stop and tell you how much I love your channel. Thank you for doing what you do. I've learned so much from you.
That A major example riff took be back to early 2000’s MCR time, Also I love how simple and easy you break down all the theory in your videos, I’m never forgetting this channel.
One other blocker is Ozzy (or if it is Sharon). Videos can be blocked just by mention his name. And yeah Metallica are cool, maybe they learned something from Napster
@@rickfeith6372 Don Henley is a POS and Glen Frey WAS! They even treated the rest of their own band like shit! You won't pry a penny out of my cold dead hand for Eagles' music! I know that's ironic for the rest of the band, but maybe we can skate 'em tips and leave Henley out in the cold!
Its disgusting. They are GREAT musicians, every one of em, that write simple to follow yet complex arrangements. But...with that attitude they can go extinct.
Let me first say I am the beginner-est ever. I've been searching for this information for months, and here it is! I even understood some of it, but then you lost me....However, you got me as a subscriber and possibly a student! Thank you so much!
One of my favorite things is when I mess around and find a single-note lick, to then turn it into power chords. Do it as notes, then power chords, and it makes it sound so much heavier the second time around.
Ay I do the same thing. A similar example is doing a riff in acoustic guitar and then electric. Like the interlude to the intro to the solo on the song white cluster by opeth (e 553 - 62 - 31)
Lovely! As long as we understand each other there's nothing wrong, as it's just another language... 🤠 Back in the school days, we called the fifth interval(or the fifth chord if you wish) with an added octave above for a power-chord. I always thought "powered" because of the doubled note. For example G-D-G for the G-power-chord. Thank you for such great lessons, you are a great teacher. Not every good musician is a good teacher as teaching is an art for itself. 💕🎸🎶
When I started playing the guitar I was highly inspired by System Of A Down so I early on started tuning my guitars to Dropped C. Then in the last years I went back to standard tuning and just then found out the appeal of inverted power chords... I couldnt imagine I'd still be able to play everything this way around! The fifth really deserves its name of the Dominant :)
You’re the first person to explain the root & fifth will get me a power chord, I’m new to guitar and you have introduced me to learning it quite like Math as in getting to a result by taking a different path.
I usually play the tonic, fifth AND the octave, when playing power chords. That way, it feels more full and powerful even when not using distortion. Plus, I'd say it also sounds better than just the tonic + fifth with distortion as well.
I love you dude. I've been playing for around 15 years and for the most part had a crazy passion and drive. and in the last few years I've lost touch with music and lost alot of my passion. Life happens. I was diagnosed with severe thyroid disease and chronic endocrine disease. Your videos have been helping me through the depression. I hadn't touched my guitar in about 3 years and now im back to 5-6 hrs a day. I've always been a pretty good player but you have connected so many dots. Everything makes sense. Things I knew before I actually understand. It means alot dude. Thanks so much.
@Know One if I made a song and someone remixes it or uses samples of it I would have no problem with that. I rather have creative freedom than a pile of money.
If I write a song and someone else plays it themselves, I don't care as long as they give me credit. Credit, not royalties. Don't claim my stuff as your own, but you're welcome to play it, including for other people.
Know One a lesson of how a song is constructed is Not a cover. Imagine a professor teaching a film class and not being able to play a movie to study, or an art class where teacher has to pay a fee for showing the stroke style in a VanGough painting.
Dude I love the videos on how you write cord progressions, can you please tell us how to write power cord progressions? (punk/metal/rock) I've been having alot of fun learning more about the guitar through your videos and I would love to be able to further expand that.
You’ve saved me from moving on from guitar. I’m not even joking. I’ve wanted to write songs and it was getting really frustrating that I couldn’t. But, now, I have somewhat of an idea what I’m doing and it makes feel better. Best guitar teacher right here
Dude, where were you (and UA-cam) when I picked up a guitar at 16? Well, it's not too late to know what a power chord really is after having played 14,329,789,222 of 'em in my life. Thanks for the great video. You put a smile on my face. (Oh, and I'm quite jealous of your easy communication.) Greetings from The Netherlands.
I've been watching a lot of your videos because they're interesting, I like your educational approach, but on this one I learned something I hadn't considered before about the augmented 5th in the power chord actually implying a major 3rd with a root on the augmented 5th note. Gives it kind of a I-V implication when you nudge the root down a half step. Thanks.
Dude, this is my 2nd video of yours and we're friends now. Just wanted to brief you on that. I'm one of the 37,545,213 "self taught guitarists" floating around UA-cam, but i think my self awareness makes me slightly less obnoxious than them, I can appreciate the endless knowledge you display and understand me knowing how to play Enter Sandman in my bedroom doesn't make me a guitarist or musician. I play for me, it's the only thing that helps with the PTSD I had after returning from Iraq.Other than my wife and kids, I can't play in front of anyone, not even my mom. Nerves. But I did finally bring myself to record and upload a cover of Money For Nothing. All that being said, I don't know shit and am in absolute awe when listening to actual real musicians dissect the art. The world needs more people like you my friend🤘😝 p.s. do that Papa Het thing again PLEASE🤣🤣
When I first heard the term "power chord' I thought it was related to connecting electric things to the mains. I still remember where I heard the therm. It was in Meatloaf's Wasted Youth. "It required the correct combination of power chords and the precise angle at which to strike". May not be word for word, but you get the point.
I been using the "Diminish Power Chord" and the "Stretched" for years now and this is the first time I realized what I was doing. I feel like a fool but thank you for this video. I am enlightened.
My guitar teacher Jake Lizzio Sir is a God sent Angel speaking his heart out and explaining everything so nicely that it becomes part of my neural network pretty soon
If people only see your theory videos, they may not know how amazingly talented you are as an artist in every other way pertaining to music. I really appreciate these topical teachings. Thank you.
Okay, let's break down something different. How about the proper way to use spoken voice parts over your song? Let's use Alice Cooper's "Black Wi-" Sorry, my bad.
Jake, you are an excellent teacher. You make some difficult concepts very easy to understand. THAT'S not easy. And you do it all so non-chalantly. I must add, I enjoy the subtle comedy infused thru out. Thank you!
@@toranada Here's an easy example: Make a G5 Power Chord with your index finger on the 3rd fret of the low E string (G) and your middle finger on the 5th fret of the A string (D). Now put your pinky on the 7th fret of the D string (A). You'll see that you're fretting 2 different Root & 5th Power Chords at the same time: a G5 from your index finger AND a D5 from your middle finger.
Dude Im 58 years old being playing acoustic for sometime but picked up electric about a year ago. Always wanted to play. My som bought me a Strat and I love it. Its a huge change. But what you just shared opened my eyes to some serious jammin. Thnx
That kick, crash, low G note plus double guitar is like golden info to me man! I’m buzzin about that. I can see now what a lot of the heavier bands are doing to get that beef! Your a legend Jake, nice one.
2:50 the hotel California chord sequence is a blatant copy of Jethro Tull's 'we used to know' from the 1969 album 'Stand Up'. The Eagles even toured with Tull at the time. Would be great if people could give Tull some more credit
There's another song with the Hotel California changes, but I can't remember what it is, or whether it's earlier than 1969. Sucks having 73 year old brains.
Oh no! You said the words " hotel California" on a guitar instruction video.. ya, this will get copyright blocked for sure! Great vid btw. Very helpful.. thanx!
I found you a week ago and i am already learning so much its fascinating, sometimes after years of searching you stumble over the right people so thank you for all this valuable information!
I feel like my understanding shot up instantly because of this video. I've been playing these chords since my first week of learning guitar and I've been trying to learn to compose for much longer. But this really licks in so many reasons why this is so versatile and how to apply it!
I really hate to be pedantic but at 1:30 you talk about how a G and D when played together are not a chord. They are indeed a chord. Playing more than one note at the same time is by definition, a chord. G and D are not a triad, they are a dyad; but still a chord. 2 notes is a dyad, 3 a triad, 4 a tetrad, 5 a pentad, etc.
I personally have lost track of what everyone believes in regards to this, the Theory teacher would tell you two notes together are just an interval instead of a chord
Yep you're right- I've been yelled at by internet theorists for trying to name dyads ("they're just intervals") and my first theory book taught that chords = 3 notes so I've always clung to that interpretation. To be honest I find it a silly definition- I don't know any chord names for 2-note chords that don't reference a triad or interval, so it seems that "chords" all depend on 3 notes and dyads are basically just intervals. However, I'm not entitled to rewrite the language so I should have clarified that. I think the responsible way to phrase that segment would have been "When people say the word 'chord', they're usually talking about something with 3 notes", which is accurate but also teaches the concept without opening up a new can of worms. Thanks for the comment and make sure you call me out next time I over-simplify!
Signals Music Studio my bad man I was just relating to the debate cause I see the argument online (r/musictheory constantly) and I just wanted to add to it. I personally don’t think either way is wrong, and it doesn’t matter to me what someone calls it
Signals Music Studio my bad man I was just relating to the debate cause I see the argument online (r/musictheory constantly) and I just wanted to add to it. I personally don’t think either way is wrong, and it doesn’t matter to me what someone calls it
Isn't it like, minor triad, major triad, perfect fourth, perfect fifth?
Came for the theory, stayed for the Hetfield impersonation.
Lol
Petition for the creation of a whole series around Metallica versions of classic songs, Hetfield impersonation included. Signed:
1) Everson Bernardes
@@LowdownBoy I was totally going to stay for the theory. I watched the rest of the video a little distracted by the hope that there would be a whole Hetfield Hotel California at the end =P
Me too!
EHEEYEEAHHHHHHHH
3:17 you have turned Hotel California into Hot Hell Callin For Ya'
Nice
Lovely
“You can check out anytime you like, but you can never leave”
@@joshuaallgood7030 (Yeah, yeah)
I like cant believe you do these in one take
woah
How does this not have more likes??
@@haydenlandry3837 1-2-5
Play something bro
I know. Clear thinking.
I've taught guitar for 27 years. Started playing at 15. I'm 64 years old now. I wish I had a teacher like you when I first started. Thank you for your contribution to the guitar playing community. Always informative, entertaining and enthusiastic. And humorous.
@andrewcrew andrewcrew lucky you! Now give us some notes. Big ones! 🤟
Yes, I'm 14 years older than you and grew up when there was no information of this kind. Not even with lessons. My thanks to this guy.
Your Hetfield impersonation is on point! 'Rising up through the ayyyeeeeee' 😂
Lol
For me that totally made seens - in German "ayyyeeeeeee" (we would actually write it "Eier") means balls..... rising up through the balls.... never occurred to me when listening to the original, but now is like the scales fell from my eyes, I mean my balls....
It totally could be a song from Garage Inc.
🤣🦹🦹🦹
I totally want him to finish that cover!
5:03
*_Guitar Center has left the chat_*
*_Rudy Ayoub has entered he chat_*
*_Copyright has entered the chat_*
Just wanna say thank you to all 201,000 of you that decided to learn from my videos. I have the best comment section in all of youtube and thats all your fault! Also thank you x100,000 to my patient Patreon subscribers who sponsor these videos. I'm getting a lot of copyright strikes on my videos now so their help is hugely appreciated. now watch this video and rock out!
...soon it will be a copyright infringement just for dropping names like Metallica in your video any where... strike...you typed Metallica scale... strike, you said the name Metallica...shame on us all for giving recognition to bands... holy effing LOL!
Great stuff, keep it coming!!!
202,515-201,000=1,515
You are the best.
I really love your videos sirs , but i have a question ? Does learning power chords first is a good first step for learning to play a guitar ? I'm a drummer my whole life and i want to explore more about music. Hope you can read this sir. I'm a fan of your vids
You could do another part on this. Check out Drain You by Nirvana. If you extend the chords out based off the melody you get (tuned down) A(6) C#m(b9) F#m7 Bm / A C#7(b9) F# Bm. It's (inter)changing modally and flirting with the 7th mode of B melodic minor - Bb altered, or super locrian - which doesn't even contain the A which somehow remains at the root. Or don't bother with modes and just try to wrap your head around the complexity and chromaticism of the overall harmonic structure. In any case it's pretty far out stuff and shows just how much you can do with power chords. And that's just one song. Cobain had a gift for that shit that Billie Joe and other latter day punks have never had. They just rewrite Irish rebel songs.
You made my day with "Enter California" !!
When you sang the word "air" as James Hetfield, I nearly collapsed. Thank you
Made My Morning!!!😂
🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I lawled out loud
So good 😂😂😂
Genius.
Hey, even a musical diet of just Green Day and Nirvana songs is still a pretty epic representation of the power, ambiguity, and attitude of what power chords are capable of. It becomes more about the energy over the complexity.
I've seen some people say Green Day songs all sound the same, but look at the chill acoustic fingerstyle of Wake Me Up When September Ends, the sad but uplifted dorian mode with tremolos with electric and acoustic effects in Boulevard of Broken Dreams. American Idiot is percussive driven with chops and minimalist but filling sustains. Holiday has the rhythm of the Sith Anthem from Star Wars (which came from Chopin's Marche funèbre and English composer Gustav Holst's Opus 32, The Planets, written between 1914 and 1917,[11] and Grande Marche de Medjidie by August Ritter Von Adelburg) without out being blatant like My Woman by Al Bowlly & Lew Monsignueer Band (better known for the sample Your Woman by White Town but most likely known for the further sample Love Again by Dua Lipa (I don't think that Green Day knew that they used that rhythm just like Ashley McBryde in Radioland, and Weezer in Island On The Sun, the Hotwire commercial jingle, Found A Way from Drake & Josh, but my song You Can Always End It Tomorrow was on purpose). My point is, Green Day actually stood out for me and actually was always my only real example of any mainstream & alternnative pop punk band that has many different sounds
"You get a sound like this... which is glorious"
Amen, brother
"I really like phrygian dominant"
A man after my own heart
ayyyy, i really like phrygian dominant too
Is there a phrygian submissive?
panicrev555 yeah regular Phrygian is Phrygian submissive
@W0Y4K ...It's also seemingly one of the few scales you can easily play melodies in without any accompaniment whatsoever and it still sounds stable!
@@panicrev555 Phrygian Dominant: Asserts dominance with its strong major 3rd
Phrygian (Submissive): Submits with its weak minor 3rd
Really appreciated the James Hetfield impression :) great video too!
It was so perfect!
Fucking spot on
PissedFechtmeister don’t forget the wah
I know it was my favorite part of the video
Me too
"There's a lot more to power chords than just Green Day and Nirvana songs..."
Bruh, I really felt that. As a fan of both bands both lead guitarists inspired me to pick a guitar.
same here dawg!
yup for me it was Breaking Benjamin drop d bar chords and Blink 182 power chords that got me started and the more songs I learned to play the better my ear got and now I will just mess around and figure out songs sometimes.
Exactly… look at how diverse the 90’s was for music. Possibly the most diverse decade ever for every genre: grunge, pop-punk, alternative, indie and hip hop etc. So much great music came from the 90’s that had or was their own genre or lived in both, like Rage Against the Machine with sick hyper drop-D riffs or Sublime in the way Brad Nowell blended reggae, punk and blues so melodically
Dude it just feels redundant to say but man thanks so much for the videos you make, you made me fall in love with music theory and your channel's the gift that keeps on giving, you're doing the world of music a service ! :D
thanks :)
We want full version of Hotel California by Metallica 3:16 - 3:27
Yeahhhh🤘🏻
My style is doing lots of fast power chords using only downstrokes while screaming *YEAH!!!*
YEAH
*YEAH!!!!*
the key to that technique is not using more than 3 power chords.
@@MadDunhill Three? Jeez, a bit much.
Skwisgaar Skwigelf okay, Skwisgaar, go back to sweep picking
I recently started playing my guitars regularly (every day) after a several year break, and man I am sure glad I found your channel! You pulled me out of a long funk of playing everything by ear with very minimal understanding of why. Now I'm reversing engineering everything I know and trying to break bad habits. Thank you for your awesome work!
Dropped everything to watch this channel YET AGAIN.
Ok, out of all guitar youtubers I watch on a daily basis, you have the most warm "dad" energy
Disregard theory, acquire sick riffs should be on a t-shirt. Also that was a spot on Hetfield impersonation.
That was the best music advice I have ever seen.
The 2nd time I've watched this video I've noticed that text. It took me second but then I knew which meme it was referencing 😂
Also the the "2 thirds" joke @ 1:50 very nice 👌✨
I'd buy that shirt.
This is the single best video about power chord theory and variations. I’ve come back to it several times for a re watch
you put your first finger on a fret, but your third one on the string below it two frets away, move it around a bit, an boom
now go make a band
thats augmenyed and diminished
@@anymusic24 "two frets away"
Thats exactly what we did in high school. 😂
This is great information. As an old armchair guitarist, I actually pick out songs with melody lines, and had no clue about two-note "power" chords. Thanks.
You look like a 2001-era Mike Shinoda, with the black hair/clothes/guitar and Hetfield impersonation. Love the video too, great job!
HAHA exactly what I thought, just without his japanese side lol
Omg yeah
So I'm not the only one who see it
Fax
Jake, I re-watched this video when I was completely drained of energy after a busy day. This was just the powersurge I needed all day long. You hetfielding almost woke the kids at midnight as I burst out laughing so loud. Btw, excellent presentation of theory - as usual. Thanks!
Best guitar music theory channel in UA-cam. Thanks for the great content
The production quality of this video is just another level.
1:51 That is the real reason powerchords are used so much in rock! Because you are playing 2/3 of a chord or 66.6%
It's 66,6% percent more chords, per note! How do we get so many notes in there? Like this!
RedStone128 Jimmy Page Johnson, we’re done here.
I keep coming back to this lesson--it's one of the best 15 minute investments a rock guitarist can make. Even if it only helps you with 1 out of 10 chord progressions, that is a major improvement and solves so many of the "this isn't working, I have to try something completely different/shelve it" roadblocks we run into. Thanks again Jake!
People will argue endlessly whether combinations of 1's and 5's should be called a dyad, interval, harmony, or chord. There are experts who can be quoted to support any of these names. When playing a piano, acoustic guitar, or even a horn section, this debate has its place.
However, when an instrument is intentionally being distorted by a non-linear signal path, that signal path is really part of the instrument. Playing an electric guitar through a distortion pedal or heavily overdriven amplifier requires a different skill set than playing an acoustic guitar.
When intervals composed of 1's and 5's are played with distortion, that is the context when they are called power chords. The distortion naturally adds more notes into the mix.
When a combination such as 1-5-1 is played on a distorting instrument, the sounded notes are not just 1-5-1. The distortion adds several new frequencies, and some of these new frequencies are actually the major 3rd.
As a simple example, playing 5-1, the inversion where the 5th is just below the root, would normally result in frequencies at 0.75 and 1 times the frequency of the root note. But when playing these two notes on a distorting instrument, distortion products are also naturally produced at frequencies of 0.5 and 1.25 times the original root frequency. The note at 0.5 would be an octave down from the root, and the note at 1.25 is the major 3rd. Now you have a person fingering notes at 5-1 (the 5th and the root), but sounding notes at 1-5-1-3 (0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.25 aka root, 5th, root, 3rd). That is one version of the power chord.
Note: There will also be many more distortion products present - especially odd harmonics. Some of these will also be major 3rds.
I just saw an ad for the Encyclopedia of Scales. It claims there are a total of 2048 Scales (no more/no less) and it includes all 2 note intervals as SCALES!!!!
Great info on the Harmonic Frequencies! That's so wild!
GG
Beautiful explanation of how power chords work!
This is great information, thanks
Power Chords are the best on Distortion! Great video to see my man! Knowing this, I will definitely incorporate some more logical and sophisticated playing and utilization in my power chords. Gives new life to them
I REALLY like the approach of teaching "power chords" to beginners. It's super important to know WHY power chords sound good over almost ANYTHING, here are MY two reasons, I hope they help:
1. Learn the circle of 5ths (obviously) WITHOUT thinking too much. Just remember that on guitar, the "5th" is the same FRET as the (root) note you're playing, BUT one string closer to your face. Ea. in C major = 3rd fret on A string (C), and the "5th" is the 3rd fret on the E string. (G). The G is the the fifth of C (tonal center).
2. Introduction to theory! Power chords FORCE the student to play simple phrasing correctly. Otherwise, it just "didn't sound right, etc." around others. Learning MODES and INTERVALS are absolutely ESSENTIAL for ANYONE learning music.
GREAT POST!!!
My compliments. I've been teaching for many (too many) years, and this is the best explanation of "power chords" (yeah, I know they're diads) I've seen. And then, the exploration into augmented/diminished 5ths. Well done.
Some folks might like this: When I was a kid, I got a Spirograph for Christmas. I soon noticed the gears that had a simple ratio to each other, like 32:64 made simple patterns, but 63:64 made a very complicated pattern. The same thing happens in music: a root and 5 have a 1:1.5 ratio. That makes a simple waveform, practically usable as a single note, as you pointed out. But then other things happen. When you put two frequencies together, you get *more* frequencies. You get one that is the sum of the frequencies, and one that is the difference between them. Example: the "zero beat" you hear when two strings aren't quite on the same note is the difference between the two notes. And then, those new frequencies interact with the originals, and each other, creating lots of other harmonic multiples. As long as the original two notes have a simple ratio like 1:1.5 the spectrum created by those two makes a nice orderly sound. But if the original two are out of tune, or a more dissonant interval, the resulting waves are all over the place, and you get a trashy hash of non-musical frequencies. A guitar in high gain really makes this obvious.
That Hetfiled impression lmaooo!
"Yeah!"
"Rising up through the ayyeee"
Perfect
OMG! I've been playing smoke on the water wrong for 20 years!
Oooooooh, so THAT'S why my guitar sounded so cool the other day! I found the inverted power chords on string the E and A strings the other day. REALLY got in the way of practicing when I was just jamming out and having fun lol 😆
Yeah, those inverted power chords just sound "extra heavy" to me!
This is how i always practice. I just play nearly every day. Just what ever sounds good and feels good. I can't be bother to practice scales intentionally or chord progressions haha.
What i like most about Jake is how seriously and nonchalantly he mentions djent dubstep and numetal. 😂 keep it up Jake
Yeah The Theory of Iron maiden Sabbath,,,,, who has makin this 50 years straight !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WOW
3:26 Nice hetfield impression
its like throat singing, but with lots of "NAH" and "AYYYYYEEEEEE"
Love what you did here to get all the copyright holders fighting over the proceeds. Genius! As is your instruction.
Much gratitude.
Rock On!
@@daronhickman6096 this is actually the greatest way to look at the issue
The thing about the diminished power chords was a revelation. I've heard the tritone is used "a lot" in metal, with people pointing back to the riff "Black Sabbath", but that song is far more dissonant that most metal. Learning that the tritones are actually used as the secret to make power chords more tonal than just using fifths explains why most uses of the tritone in metal don't sound dissonant.
You are the best teacher in UA-cam so far ... and I have listened a lot ... THANK YOU SIR .
After subscribing and watching a few dozen of your videos I thought it was time to stop and tell you how much I love your channel. Thank you for doing what you do. I've learned so much from you.
"warm smell of collita hugh risin' up through the aeeeaaaa!"
Lol. You nailed the spelling. Aeeeaaaa! Lol.
That A major example riff took be back to early 2000’s MCR time, Also I love how simple and easy you break down all the theory in your videos, I’m never forgetting this channel.
Don't be so careless, Jake! With that impression you're risking a copyright strike from Metallica AND The Eagles at the same time!
According to Rick Beato, Metallica is cool...The Eagles on the other hand are "Blockers". Don Henley ain't having none of that.
One other blocker is Ozzy (or if it is Sharon). Videos can be blocked just by mention his name. And yeah Metallica are cool, maybe they learned something from Napster
@@rickfeith6372 Don Henley is a POS and Glen Frey WAS! They even treated the rest of their own band like shit! You won't pry a penny out of my cold dead hand for Eagles' music! I know that's ironic for the rest of the band, but maybe we can skate 'em tips and leave Henley out in the cold!
@@rickfeith6372 no wonder my video of playing the Hotel California solo got deleted. I get it now.
Its disgusting. They are GREAT musicians, every one of em, that write simple to follow yet complex arrangements. But...with that attitude they can go extinct.
Started using the inversion of chords about a year ago. Man talk about giving a sound a boost.
Q: What happens if you cross a diminished chord with a augmented chord? A: You get a Demented chord :)
How do I get a fermented chord!
@@Tricknologyinc You need a fermished chord + augmented chord. 'Fermished' is Yiddish for mixed-up, confused.
Tricknologyinc record yourself playing it, then use that recording as a sample 20 years later
Lol.
You get what you f___ing deserve!
Dude your ch is amazing. Been watching for 1.5 - 2 yrs. Great to see it growing, i do my part in my circle here and there.
Great stuff. "Weak" by Lagwagon in the 90s taught me the "stretched power chord" and I've been using it since.
Agreed, it always reminds me of No Use for a Name too.
Let me first say I am the beginner-est ever. I've been searching for this information for months, and here it is! I even understood some of it, but then you lost me....However, you got me as a subscriber and possibly a student! Thank you so much!
One of my favorite things is when I mess around and find a single-note lick, to then turn it into power chords. Do it as notes, then power chords, and it makes it sound so much heavier the second time around.
Ay I do the same thing. A similar example is doing a riff in acoustic guitar and then electric. Like the interlude to the intro to the solo on the song white cluster by opeth
(e 553 - 62 - 31)
Lovely! As long as we understand each other there's nothing wrong, as it's just another language... 🤠 Back in the school days, we called the fifth interval(or the fifth chord if you wish) with an added octave above for a power-chord. I always thought "powered" because of the doubled note. For example G-D-G for the G-power-chord. Thank you for such great lessons, you are a great teacher. Not every good musician is a good teacher as teaching is an art for itself. 💕🎸🎶
11:30 That riff sounds so frickin awesome.
Coming from Mozart, that’s quite the compliment
Ikr I was really impressed. Gave me vibes of this song in the chorus vv
ua-cam.com/video/uAmINmjpQxw/v-deo.html
This channel has just rocketed to the top of my UA-cam guitar theory.
When I started playing the guitar I was highly inspired by System Of A Down so I early on started tuning my guitars to Dropped C. Then in the last years I went back to standard tuning and just then found out the appeal of inverted power chords... I couldnt imagine I'd still be able to play everything this way around! The fifth really deserves its name of the Dominant :)
You’re the first person to explain the root & fifth will get me a power chord, I’m new to guitar and you have introduced me to learning it quite like Math as in getting to a result by taking a different path.
I usually play the tonic, fifth AND the octave, when playing power chords. That way, it feels more full and powerful even when not using distortion. Plus, I'd say it also sounds better than just the tonic + fifth with distortion as well.
How profound
I love you dude. I've been playing for around 15 years and for the most part had a crazy passion and drive. and in the last few years I've lost touch with music and lost alot of my passion. Life happens. I was diagnosed with severe thyroid disease and chronic endocrine disease. Your videos have been helping me through the depression. I hadn't touched my guitar in about 3 years and now im back to 5-6 hrs a day. I've always been a pretty good player but you have connected so many dots. Everything makes sense. Things I knew before I actually understand. It means alot dude. Thanks so much.
UH OH!... You mentioned The Eagles. Your video will be banned because they have a copyright on the Bm chord.
@Know One Ehhh...
@Know One if I made a song and someone remixes it or uses samples of it I would have no problem with that. I rather have creative freedom than a pile of money.
If I write a song and someone else plays it themselves, I don't care as long as they give me credit. Credit, not royalties. Don't claim my stuff as your own, but you're welcome to play it, including for other people.
@@Bad.Rabbit exactly just a bit of credit is enough.
Know One a lesson of how a song is constructed is Not a cover. Imagine a professor teaching a film class and not being able to play a movie to study, or an art class where teacher has to pay a fee for showing the stroke style in a VanGough painting.
Your take on Hetfield doing Hotel California is pure genius! Thank you for making my day!
Dude I love the videos on how you write cord progressions, can you please tell us how to write power cord progressions? (punk/metal/rock) I've been having alot of fun learning more about the guitar through your videos and I would love to be able to further expand that.
You’ve saved me from moving on from guitar. I’m not even joking. I’ve wanted to write songs and it was getting really frustrating that I couldn’t. But, now, I have somewhat of an idea what I’m doing and it makes feel better. Best guitar teacher right here
Omg dude that Metallica bit was great. Awesome videos. Very informative
This is the best channel on youtube for music theory.
Great editing, great riffs, great teacher. I learned in 14 minutes way more than I could imagine!!
Have you improved your imagination since?
Dude, where were you (and UA-cam) when I picked up a guitar at 16? Well, it's not too late to know what a power chord really is after having played 14,329,789,222 of 'em in my life. Thanks for the great video. You put a smile on my face. (Oh, and I'm quite jealous of your easy communication.) Greetings from The Netherlands.
I've been watching a lot of your videos because they're interesting, I like your educational approach, but on this one I learned something I hadn't considered before about the augmented 5th in the power chord actually implying a major 3rd with a root on the augmented 5th note. Gives it kind of a I-V implication when you nudge the root down a half step. Thanks.
Dude, this is my 2nd video of yours and we're friends now. Just wanted to brief you on that. I'm one of the 37,545,213 "self taught guitarists" floating around UA-cam, but i think my self awareness makes me slightly less obnoxious than them, I can appreciate the endless knowledge you display and understand me knowing how to play Enter Sandman in my bedroom doesn't make me a guitarist or musician. I play for me, it's the only thing that helps with the PTSD I had after returning from Iraq.Other than my wife and kids, I can't play in front of anyone, not even my mom. Nerves. But I did finally bring myself to record and upload a cover of Money For Nothing. All that being said, I don't know shit and am in absolute awe when listening to actual real musicians dissect the art. The world needs more people like you my friend🤘😝 p.s. do that Papa Het thing again PLEASE🤣🤣
When I first heard the term "power chord' I thought it was related to connecting electric things to the mains. I still remember where I heard the therm. It was in Meatloaf's Wasted Youth. "It required the correct combination of power chords and the precise angle at which to strike". May not be word for word, but you get the point.
This is a perfect example of "less is more"
Thanks!
I been using the "Diminish Power Chord" and the "Stretched" for years now and this is the first time I realized what I was doing. I feel like a fool but thank you for this video. I am enlightened.
My guitar teacher Jake Lizzio Sir is a God sent Angel speaking his heart out and explaining everything so nicely that it becomes part of my neural network pretty soon
I know nothing about rock/punk, but that scale change from major to minor was fantastic!
Dude, your version of Hotel California was badass.
If people only see your theory videos, they may not know how amazingly talented you are as an artist in every other way pertaining to music. I really appreciate these topical teachings. Thank you.
"Think of Iron Man!"
I DONT WANT TO, IT MAKES ME CRY
Love u 3000
I know it sucked where he died 😢
F
shut up normie
Okay, let's break down something different. How about the proper way to use spoken voice parts over your song? Let's use Alice Cooper's "Black Wi-"
Sorry, my bad.
Jake,
you are an excellent teacher. You make some difficult concepts very easy to understand. THAT'S not easy. And you do it all so non-chalantly. I must add, I enjoy the subtle comedy infused thru out. Thank you!
You missed one of the thicc-est most powerful power chord shapes, which is just 2 power chords stacked. e.g.
E|5
A|5
D|7
G|7
No one man should have all that power
Those sound great!
I don't understand. Can someone explain this a little more? Needing more power.
@@toranada Here's an easy example: Make a G5 Power Chord with your index finger on the 3rd fret of the low E string (G) and your middle finger on the 5th fret of the A string (D). Now put your pinky on the 7th fret of the D string (A). You'll see that you're fretting 2 different Root & 5th Power Chords at the same time: a G5 from your index finger AND a D5 from your middle finger.
@Kanashimi Oh, yeah. A to G. Thanks!
Dude Im 58 years old being playing acoustic for sometime but picked up electric about a year ago. Always wanted to play. My som bought me a Strat and I love it. Its a huge change. But what you just shared opened my eyes to some serious jammin. Thnx
11:30 Here you get a Disney series opening theme.
11:53 And here a boss fight theme
That kick, crash, low G note plus double guitar is like golden info to me man! I’m buzzin about that. I can see now what a lot of the heavier bands are doing to get that beef! Your a legend Jake, nice one.
2:50 the hotel California chord sequence is a blatant copy of Jethro Tull's 'we used to know' from the 1969 album 'Stand Up'. The Eagles even toured with Tull at the time. Would be great if people could give Tull some more credit
There's another song with the Hotel California changes, but I can't remember what it is, or whether it's earlier than 1969. Sucks having 73 year old brains.
One of the best guitar teachers on the Internets - IMHO - :) It just started clicking in the brain - very well presented.
Oh no! You said the words " hotel California" on a guitar instruction video.. ya, this will get copyright blocked for sure! Great vid btw. Very helpful.. thanx!
I'm using this for my techno productions. Totally works. Base, Lead, Lead 2
Power Chord Classic: 'Owner of a Lonely Heart' by YES.
BYRON'S TUTORIALS PAGE funny,I was thinking the same thing,that's an awesome song
You are the best music teacher God has ever sent on this Planet. Period!!
I didnt know SHAZAM teaches guitar
I did learn something. Been playing guitar over 20 years now. Thank you and the patreons!!!
I can't talk about "Stretched-out power chords" without playing "Hold On Loosely."
Amazing song!
Thank you! You put in words what I've been trying to explain in my head to myself for 35 years now 😊
If Mike Shinoda and Gilbert Gottfried had a son.
I found you a week ago and i am already learning so much its fascinating, sometimes after years of searching you stumble over the right people so thank you for all this valuable information!
You are living on the edge ... with all that copyrighted material xD
I've been learning music for a few months now and this is by far my favorite channel to learn from. Thank you for these videos!
5:12 DID he just play smoke on water. UMG IS GONNA CLAIM THE VIDEO. OH LORD NO.
dared jines much?
@@hobbybaschtler7896 eyyyyy
Rudy Ayoub entered the chat
I feel like my understanding shot up instantly because of this video. I've been playing these chords since my first week of learning guitar and I've been trying to learn to compose for much longer. But this really licks in so many reasons why this is so versatile and how to apply it!
Power chords are like power naps. They're good for you!