Using AUGMENTED chords | what, where, how
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- Опубліковано 17 тра 2024
- www.buymeacoffee.com/michaelk...
This video aims to explain what augmented chords are, where you can find them and a few examples of some ways you can use them and incorporate them into chord progressions.
Hopefully this might be useful to someone!
MK
Video chapters:
00:00 Intro
00:44 What is an augmented chord?
04:15 Storytime
05:33 Where do they come from?
07:02 Some use cases
12:42 More line clichés
I own a piano but almost exclusively play guitar, but damn dude I've learned more from your channel in the last month than years of watching guitar theory videos. Really appreciate you. I hope you keep making great content!
Ah cheers Michael, great to hear. Thanks for your comment, much appreciated! 🙏
Yep, I am mainly a guitar player as well and I find this channel's content approachable, actionable and for the most part instrument agnostic. Great stuff all round.
@@worblyhead996 Thank man, there seem to be quite a few guitarists who are getting stuff from my videos which is great to hear. Thanks for sharing 👍
In my life experience there are very few people who can explain things as well as you. A lot of smart people fall silent with their eyes pointed to the sky when trying to explain and leave you thinking that they understand it, but we are not capable of understanding, rather than they just cannot explain it. And you deliver the goods with the wry sense of humor. I am working through your whole list and learning so much and having fun doing so. light bulbs going on in my head, appreciating music so much more
😳🙏 Thank you for such a generous comment. It's so nice to read stuff like this, really helps me feel like I'm on the right path at the moment and building something important and it's so good to know that I'm a part of other people's musical journey from all over the world. I appreciate you being here and leaving a comment, thank you 🙏
This is fantastic teaching, I must admit I have forgotten most of what I learned at college in my music theory class which leaves me feeling quite resentful of not practicing these day to day, but UA-cam has provided videos like this of which I can re learn and put back into my arsenal of knowledge.
Thanks Michael. Love the modulation bit at the end. The “cliche” in line cliche is basically because cliches are predictable. We know the punchline… the direction is expected. Therefore a line cliche means we know the next in the sequence as we can predict it.
Hey Tim, thanks makes perfect sense! Thanks for sharing 👍
Whoa, that modulating progression at 10:44 sounds incredible, so seamless!
I’ve been trying to figure out what it is that makes your videos so unreasonably effective… it’s a hard thing you are doing, and you make it look easy! You have a really cool combination of often complicated subject matter approached with practical examples, explained verbally, musically, with chord charts, and with the on-screen piano. I find myself rewatching bits and taking notes on all of your videos.
Thanks for your generous comment Alexander. I'm really pleased you feel that way about my videos and that you seem to be getting some value from them. Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment 🙏
I recall that back in 1970 I began hearing people around me speaking music terminology. I only remembered a few things from music class in eighth grade. I wanted to know what they meant by chords and keys and progressions etc. I went to the library and took out books on music theory. Next I figured I better get a musical instrument so that I could apply what I learned. I bought a guitar. I was an art student at the time so my investigations were more of a hobby, not a favorite word of mine. I really like your videos as they are taking me into unknown territory. Thanks.
Thanks for your comment Patrick, we're all on different journeys as musicians and all have different destinations, I'm pleased to be part of yours and glad my content is helping you. 🙏
My favourite new (to me) channel! As a guitar player I never REALLY learned music, I rather learned patterns and shapes. You sir, brilliantly fill all the gaps in my musical knowledge. Thank you for these thorough and mindfull expositions. Love it how you are able to take a bitesize topic and fully expand on it yet keeping it simple.
Ah, thanks and welcome!! I appreciate your kind comment and glad you're getting some value from my videos. Thanks for taking the time to share the love 🙏
Michael, absolutely brilliant! What you're putting out here and in your other stuff is top shelf musical knowledge and presentation. Fantastic... keep up the good work!
Ah, cheers, really appreciate your kind comment. Thanks for the support and encouragement, glad you're enjoying the videos. 🙏
Thank you Mr. Michael keithson. Your videos are very helpful for hungry players. It gives clear understanding about jazz concepts.😊
You are very welcome! I'm glad you think they have some value. Thanks for the comment! 🙏
augmented chords are so nice!! I find myself using augmented chords as passing chords a lot, I think that stacked thirds sound is really ear catching, and really makes you hear how each note is pulled into its next position
something this video made me realize is i never really experimented with sitting on an augmented chord long enough for all its qualities to sink in. it has such a mysterious sound haha.
thank you for another great watch!!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it and it made you think! Cheers
Been playing piano as a hobby for 30 years. Loving the content!
Thank you Kristian, great to hear your enjoying the videos. Thanks for leaving a comment 👍
I never like when the video ends 🤣. There is so much depth and insight to every detail. So good!!
Ha! Thanks Elijah, I appreciate your kind words 🙏
You sir, are an amazing teacher. Beautiful stuff here! Thank you for all the effort you put into this. Keep up the great work!
🙏 Thank you Michael for your kind comment, really appreciate the support.
I love your videos man!! Such an amazing context for those musical concepts!!
Thank you
Ah thanks Ashraf! Glad you’re enjoying the content, appreciate you taking the initiative to comment 🙏
Excellent content!!! How great learning I am having with these videos. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!!!
Thanks Ugo, really pleased to hear that you're enjoying the videos. Thank you for leaving a comment 🙏
I dont usually comment on UA-cam, but i discovered your channel today and found this video really well-made and very instructive. Having a solid foundation in music theory, i still learnt a lot and your beautiful piano play (and singing!) have given me great inspiration for my own music. You've won a new subscriber! Greetings from Germany
Hans! Thank you so much for taking the time to comment. I really appreciate your support and encouragement and thanks for the sub! Really glad you enjoyed the video and even more pleased that it's inspired you too! Thank you 🙏
THANKS SO MUCH! you are an awesome teacher Michael :) also, love the editing style!
Thank you 🙏
Glad you're enjoying the content, appreciate your comment.
I appreciate the general aethetic of this video: your voice, ambience, lighting, the chords of course. Its soothing, pleasant is what I want to say I guess. Too much content is flashy and animated these days.😊
Thanks man, really appreciate your comment. Glad your enjoying the vibes 👍🏼
Thank you Michael. Marvelous as usual.
Thanks Kevin! Appreciate the support 🙏
yet another awesome class!, thank you maestro.
🙏
Another incredibly useful video! I thought augmented chords were just a bit of an oddity, I didn’t realise they’re so versatile and useful. Thank you. Please keep cranking out this awesome content!
Cheers Ryan, glad there was something new in there for you 👍
You are a great teacher with great pedagogical skills.
Thank you Kareem, I appreciate your kind words 🙏
Incredible video Michael!
Thanks Jacob, appreciate your comment 🙏
Another absolutely fantastic video, you are an absolute gem
Cheers Jimmy, appreciate the support 👍🏼
just found your channel and you are a fantastic teacher. i'm a guitar player but the way you teach clicks really makes it clear. thanks!
Welcome aboard Shawn!
Thanks for your kind comment, I’m really pleased your finding my videos useful. Thanks for sharing the love. 🙏
just came across your channel this week. just wanna say keep at it. you're an excellent teacher and your vibe is just right.
there's a lot of shouting on youtube and there are people like me that think being spoken to calmly is bloody wonderful.
Thanks man, really appreciate your comment. Glad you're enjoying the content 🙏
Thank you so much! Really appreciate the details you explained, really helps people like me, first-time watcher and already subscribed!
Welcome!! Thanks for the sub! Glad you enjoyed the vid. 👍🏼🎹
You are a fantastic teacher. Thanks!!
🙏 Thank you. I appreciate your kind words.
Very Interesting Michael. I always seem to pick up something new from you. I thank you very much. Love learning daily. Hope you have a great day.
Thank you Bill 🙏
It's really good to hear that you're finding some value from my content. I hope you have a great day too!
I’ve been struggling with modulation. This has given lots to work through. Thanks for the video. You’re a great presenter.
Cheers Pete, glad you found it useful! Thanks for the kind comment 🙏
Fantastic video, thank you Michael!
You are very welcome! Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for the comment 🙏
Excellent tutorial! Thank you.
Thanks Steve!
I've only just had a chance to watch this - another excellent video. Thank you.
Thank you 🙏
Thank you for this lesson!
You are very welcome! Hope it was useful.
This is a really good lesson. I don't even play piano I am a guitar player but this is super helpful.
Awesome! Glad it was useful. The piano such a brilliant visual instrument to teach on as it's so linear, good to hear it was nicely transferable for you. 👍
Same here, I play guitar mainly and never learnt theory previously so when I think about intervals I visualise a keyboard in my head instead of the fretboard, just seems easier!
I hadn't thought of using augmented chords to change key, but I knew diminished chords have the same function. I'm guessing it works because they're both symmetrical? Anyway, this is becoming one of my favourite channels for theory stuff, keep up the good work. 👍
@@VirtualModular Cheers, glad you're enjoying the content!
you r my fav guitar teacher ❤
Ha! I've been surprised at how many guitarists have been appreciating the content. Thanks for sharing the love 🙏
This was gold!
Cheers Kalle, glad you got something out of it. Thanks for the comment 👍
So Nice.. This is such a good “a ha” moment for me ! Great content!
Awesome! Glad there was something useful in there. Thanks for the comment 🙏
Another great video!
Thanks Ali! 🙏
Brilliant! Your words are like keys (no pun intended) that open doors in my mind. Well done, sir.
his keys are my words, pun intended, bg
Cheers Micah, appreciate your comment and really good to hear that the video was useful! 👍
SUper clear as ever with easy play along tempos....Some fun little practice nuggets...And who cares if they're CLiche's when they can be great vehicles / transition points to wherever you want to go. Hat tip to you once again !
Cheers man, appreciate your kind comment 🙏
Yes!!! Thank you!❤
You are very welcome!
I like how you explain things
Fascinating! As always. I love that last part about modulation. Between the diminished chords in the previous video and now with the augmented chords I can modulate in all directions. On the other hand, it's starting to exasperate my double bass player! 🤭😅
Hey Corentin, cheers for the comment. Who needs a bass player anyway! 😂
@@michaelkeithson 🤭😅🤣
Bravo! Idea generating stuff.
Awesome, glad it’s inspired some exploration! 👍🏼
Love this!
Cheers Adam! Appreciate the support. Congrats on passing 10k 👏🥳
That progression at 9:32 is the same as in Green Day's "Last Night on Earth" (except the key).
I love this channel!
Thanks Christopher! Glad you're enjoying the content. Thanks for the comment 🙏
Thank you this was very helpful
Awesome! Glad you found it useful! Good luck on your piano journey 👍🎹
Thanks so much. Excellent as always with great practical examples.The only thing that's unclear is your lighting situation 🙂🙃🙂
Thank you 🙏. Not a fan of the moody home office vibes? 😂
Fantastic content
Thanks man, appreciate the support 🙏
Feels like illegal to watch it for free. Always adding value.
I hope you can have video about parallel minor modal mixtures. I know you have video talking about modal interchange but it's facinating the pull of parallel minor interchange in particular.
Hope to see ways to use it in a chord progression as well. Thanks for these channel michael you saved us
Ah, thanks for the kind comment, I appreciate the support and really pleased you're enjoying the videos.
Are you talking about modal mixture between a major key it's parallel minor specifically, ie C major and C minor or something else?
Yes, I believe that’s what he’s talking about. I also find it interesting as well, when in a major key like C for example, to modulate up a minor 3rd to E-flat major; This is essentially the same thing but changes the home base root to another major key; I love this sound.
Where u been ? :) nice to see you back. The mysterious music tutoring channel.
I was gonna ask you the same question! I've been posting every two weeks like clockwork, where have you been? 😉 Ha! Thanks for watching 🙏
yeah, it`s magic. Thx!
Thank you!
You are very welcome Edward!
Thank you ❤
🙏 You are very welcome!
Brilliant stuff Michael- keeping it simple. Would love to know how to seamlessly improvise through some of these changes without just using the blues or pentatonic scale all the time
Thanks for your comment. Improvising over an augmented chords you might typically use the Phrygian Dominant scale, sounds scary but it's the 5th mode of the Harmonic minor scale, so for a G7+ use C harmonic minor scale. Also, try the whole-tone scale.
Improvising in general is a big subject with lots of different approaches, I'm planning on doing a video about approaches to improvising so stay tuned for that sometime in the future!
guessing a line cliché because everyone uses it 🤔 😊… great video, btw. i play guitar but this help me understand this better especially thinking about stacked maj 3rd instead of raising the 5th.
Awesome, glad there was something useful in there for you. Cheers 👍
Sweet! For a little extra jazzy feeling try, at 7:47, a C add 9 in lieu of the plain C. I echo so many of the earlier comments about your presentation of the subject matter in such an easy to understand manner.
Cheers Daniel! 👍🏼🎹
This is amazing content, i love all the different examples, and i have been facinated by the idea of key signature changes and how to do them seamlessly so i love how you included a couple of ways to use it that way :D one question i had looking at the symbols is, what does the ø mean? like in Dø, keep making these videos please, they are so helpfull, im not sure how many more types of chords there are, but i have been analysing some music relating to my musicology studies and realised theres some cluster of notes i have no idea what to name, if you could make a video about that that would be great :D i usually try to find out what the chord would be if i try stacking them in thirds but thats not allways possible
Hey, thanks for the comment 🙏. Glad you're enjoying the content. The ⌀ means half-diminished or minor7b5. I'm actually just working on a video all about half-diminished chords so keep an eye out next week!
Could you give me a specific example of what you mean by the cluster chords?
@@michaelkeithson i couldnt find one of the ones i was struggling with so ill just make one up, how about c,c#,d#,e ? essentially what i meant with cluster is that they are close together and not easy to put in thirds (i realised a lot of them can be upper extentions omitting 5 etc but would it be something like c#m(maj7 b9?(not sure what the d# would be) omit 5)? looking forward to the half diminished video :) (if i understood it btw a half dim is a dim 7 with a sharp 7?) thnx for the reply :)
@@michaelkeithson side note, dø means die in norwegian but ⌀ and ø is not the same i see now, how did you get that symbol?
@@SocialLoners A half diminished is a m7 with a b5, so E half diminished is E G Bb D.
I think it's tricky to talk about those cluster chords without the context and knowing what the bass note might be. Often there could be various ways of naming them. Sorry I can't be more helpful.
That's interesting about the symbol and its meaning in Norwegian. I didn't realise there was a difference between the two shapes either!
BRILLIANT!
🙏
Beautiful
🙏 Thank you!
I haven't really looked deeply into augmented chords at all and is on my ever growing list of concepts to get my head wrapped around. I was looking at the the song "Some Day My Prince Will Come" in the Real Book and there are some augmented and diminished chord usages. I want to use this song as a starting point for getting my head wrapped around some of this. I also want to compare the original with how Miles did the song so I have a bit of work ahead of me :)
Hey man, thanks for the comment.
I think generally in a jazz context the those augmented chords in Someday My Prince are interchangeable with altered dominant chords, I tend to play them as #9 and #5 although they work just as well as simple augmented chords.
Happy practising!!
Nice 😊
8:52 I hear a bit of the Bond theme tune there
Great vid, thanks a lot! Did u actually end up going to the conservatoire? Because i believe i heard u say in another vid u also worked for a game studio?
Thanks man. Yeah, I did go to music college for three years and did play music full time for about 3 or 4 years but then have worked in video production since then but this year I’ve started to get back more music work again.
According to the musician,David Bennet, whose UA-cam channel is David Bennet Piano, the term Line Cliché is derived from The Great American Songbook, which contains songs from the 1920s to the 1960s. There is so much of that pattern in the songbook that it became a “cliché”, hence LINE CLICHE.
Thanks for sharing Robert, who are we to argue with David Bennett! Makes sense. 👍
I wonder when you speak at the end of using the augmented chord as a pivot chord to get to other key how many of those do players hear? The line cliques work because they are familiar to the ear. Just a thought might be a good suggestion for a follow up video
Nice job Micheal !!
Sounds like George Benson - Whitney Houston's "Greatest Love Of All" :).
Thanks Ira! 👍
Magic
Wait. What is this channel? Wow!🎉❤
Welcome Alex, take a look around, make yourself comfortable. It's good to have you here! 😉
"Every Man Must Have a Dream" by Liverpool Express - showing my age, but it's a banger!
A little before my time I think! 😂
@@michaelkeithson no doubt, but it has more line clichés than a Jeffrey Archer novel.
@@derekgreenwood9672 🤣
Pls sir is there any private courses you taking on piano class from beginners to professional? I haven't seen someone who explain and makes things easier the way you do. Pls I would like for you to make a video on the right approach or concept to use in playing the twelve keys without having to play only one key and transpose.
What piano are you using in this video? Very nice timbre.
Hi Artie, it’s a Nord Stage2 EX, although I don’t remember which piano patch it was. They have a number of piano sample options on their website that you can install on the board and occasionally add new ones. Great keyboard although it’s not that new there’s now a Nord Stage 4 available.
they just feel suspended, to me. Like a sus 4 feels like it SHOULD resolve to the maj chord so that aug you played in the intro just felt like it should go back to the first chord (cuz the 5 was raised instead of the normal 4). Unresolved but a little more suspenseful sounding to me. Also probably useful in key shifting since they are symmetrical. 3 of them in a key and 4 dim 7 in a key so.... you can find common notes and move to new keys I'm assuming. hmm watched and yep. just as I thought. haha nice vid.
Thanks for the comment. Yeah, it definitely has an unresolved sound to me too although I don't think of it like a sus chord, for me, the resolution of a sus chord feels like it's back to the original chord. So, C Csus4 C Csus2 C. Those C chords feel like the resolution but to my ear the C+ wants to resolve somewhere else that has that next chromatic note of A, so resolving to the Am or F, although I guess that's solely in relation to where it's come from. If I play a C then a C+ I feel like it's heading somewhere else but if I just play a C+ it could resolve in either direction to the C or F or Am. Interesting! Thanks for the conversation starter!
@@michaelkeithson Well, where a sus 4 is asymmetric, then it is clear where that will resolve to (i think). But as the augmented chord is symmetric, it can resolve to 3 different chords, all of them sounding equally as good (I think). Because it's just your point of ref because what really is the difference? It's all 4 notes apart so the ONLY ref as you said is just what chord you started with and then it's likely you want to hear one over the other. But since aug is just a major chord with raised 5, I do feel it's a suspension waiting to resolve just like sus 4. Aug is just sus 5. HEHE. but... WHICH sus 5? there are 3 possible chords so..... Just how I see it. Keep it simple. hehe thanks for the vids and reply. I should explore the aug chord more and try to use it to write some horror soundtrack. Incorporate that with the "Hungarian" scale. hmmmmm
🙏🏼
Nice video, can you make one about negative harmony?
Thanks Simon! Negative harmony is on my list, hopefully I'll get to that sometime soon. 👍
16:15 What's the "m" in ivm stand for?
It just means minor. For some people the lower case letters is enough to signify it's minor but not everyone interprets it that way. Like a lot of things with modern music theory there seem to be multiple ways to write the same thing. Sorry for any confusion.
@@michaelkeithson thanks, your videos are fantastic
Before watching: aug7 dominants when you want to draw stank faces (the good kind) on your band members. Bonus stank when you tritone sub it!
😂🤣
“Yeah I knew they were minor seven, but eh, I’m messing with atonality and dissonant sounds at the moment maaaan” and begin clicking your fingers.
😂 Ah, I missed a trick! Definitely should have tried that!
Line cliche because a leonine cliche would be too loud, and with the 'eon ' bit, too long.
Line Cliché: Baby Face, Tender Lover
To say that there is no minor augmented is just like to say there is no major 6
Interesting! I guess it depends on your definition of what constitutes an augmented chord. Is it merely a chord with a sharpened 5th or is it a chord made of two major thirds? I see you point if your definition is the former but if it's the latter then an augmented chord is an augmented chord, it's not a major chord or a minor chord. I don't know if there's a correct answer, or if there needs to be.
A "cliché" is an over used meme, or stereotype in French.
"Line" is not French though.
Line cliché was probably used to describe a cheap musical trick.
Thanks Pierre!
One of the meanings of cliché is: copy...