Help! I'm confused. In the first inversion, he moves the bottom note to the top, but in the second inversion, moves the middle to the top, and the bottom to the middle. ??
This is why I play by ear, but if you want to be a serious musician, or, composer this is definitely a necessity music has its own language do you know it 😆
But how do you write the chord if you want to play the 3rd inversion only in your right hand and play the root-note with your left hand at the same time? (sorry for my english)?
It's a natural symbol -- it's neither sharp nor flat. It's used as an accidental here, because there was previously an F-sharp in the measure prior, so the natural accidental is used to denote it's F natural, rather than a continuation of the F-sharp. Though I changed it to F-sharp later at 5:54.
oof fam. youve literally saved my ass for my music theory exam
same here in 2020
Same 2021
same im doing mine rn lmao
SAME lmaoo
Same here 2022 🥲
Much more informative than the ebook I got in my class. Thank you!
whats the name of the ebook? can u pass it to me?
Finally, someone speaks music English! Thank you!!!! I am going to share this with my classmates. :D
THANK YOU SO MUCH , you literally saved my live
Its a music exam it's going to kill me ik nothing about music theory
Quick and thorough explanation. Thank you man.
I can’t believe it was THIS easy all the time 🙁
Thank you so much, I didn't know the inversions in English with the American letters. I learnt a lot!!!
Love your videos very helpful have you thought about one for the sculpture plug in for logic
Great video! This clears off the fog about Triad inversions!! Thanks!
Oof this helped so much. Very thorough and nice pacing. Subbing 🤠
That a was a great presentation. Really helpful and clear to understand. Thank you
thank you so much , now its making sense
this 1 and a half hour music theory lecture took you a minute and I actually made sense of it thank you.
Love it,I learned something good.
You saved me from Music theory drama
dude you really good 💕
Great video! Thanks for the clear explanation.
Really helpful. Excellent vid. Thanks very much.
Omg ilyy thank youu
Thank you I immediately understood. My Alfred’s adult beginner book wasnt super clear on this.
Very helpful, thank you so much.
Boom! Just what I was looking for. Thanks!
Thank you and thank you so much
Works good , best simply explanation,,
Very helpful video!!!
Your explanation was clearer than my teacher's.
Thank you for this. Studying for an exam and the book that I have to study with doesn't explain inversions, and its on the exam.
Thank you very much !!!
Thank you so much for sharing
Thank you I was completely bamboozled😀
Super helpful thanks :)
Thanks!
I love that little jingle when you move the notes.
Very helpful
Thanks mate
Thanks a lot! I will pass theory I again for the 3rd time
How do I find the quality of first and second inversions?
Help! I'm confused. In the first inversion, he moves the bottom note to the top, but in the second inversion, moves the middle to the top, and the bottom to the middle. ??
the Root moves up an octave & the 3rd is moved up an octave.
octave means eight
This is why I play by ear, but if you want to be a serious musician, or, composer this is definitely a necessity music has its own language do you know it 😆
im weak at this!
Why isn't the A sharp in the second example? I am very beginner
But how do you write the chord if you want to play the 3rd inversion only in your right hand and play the root-note with your left hand at the same time? (sorry for my english)?
Esok ade kelas.. steady
What's the symbol next to the whole note(semibreves?) on F 5:52
It's a natural symbol -- it's neither sharp nor flat. It's used as an accidental here, because there was previously an F-sharp in the measure prior, so the natural accidental is used to denote it's F natural, rather than a continuation of the F-sharp. Though I changed it to F-sharp later at 5:54.
so you write C/E instead of Emin ang ?
What software are you using in the video?
He is using Sibelius. It's very good.
🎉
What about for 3rd inversions and 4th inversions etc...
For triads, they don't exist. A third inversion is just a root position chord again.
sibelius