wonderful.U know ,every night before sleeping I watch one of your music videos.It's something I eagerly wait for everyday.I feel understanding music is the key to appreciating music ,and appreciating music is something that is ,a uniquely human experience,we cant afford to miss:) ...This is something that I only realized some time back,but now I am actually working on it .. that is ,one video a day.. ,(provided I got no background of music understanding before) What I like abt your videos is that ,it is pretty intuitive to understand ,as opposed to bookish factual approach. so yes... see you tomm. :)
Wow! What a really nice comment to receive, it makes me feel like I'm on the right path and I should carry on doing what I'm doing. Good luck with exploring music and do feel free to ask any questions or would like me to cover anything in particular. Dave
Very informative. I'm gonna watch this repeatedly! Thanks! I always wondered how anyone can call a song in a certain key when it changes scales and notes as it goes along and doesn't stay boxed into a neat little box we can call the key of G or key of C. When something is called the key of G it's not 100% exact but a generalization based on the majority of notes only. You are the first person I've heard explain that of course it will modulate and this is called modulation. Makes more sense now.
why is the 5t grade triad over the minor armonic scale you were demonstrating considered as mayor? isnt it the rule that 1-3-5 over a minor scale is always a minor triad?
The interval of a fifth in neither major or minor, but perfect. So major and minor triads contain this interval of a perfect fifth and either have a minor third (minor triads) or a major third (major triads) above the root.
wonderful.U know ,every night before sleeping I watch one of your music videos.It's something I eagerly wait for everyday.I feel understanding music is the key to appreciating music ,and appreciating music is something that is ,a uniquely human experience,we cant afford to miss:) ...This is something that I only realized some time back,but now I am actually working on it .. that is ,one video a day.. ,(provided I got no background of music understanding before) What I like abt your videos is that ,it is pretty intuitive to understand ,as opposed to bookish factual approach. so yes... see you tomm. :)
Wow! What a really nice comment to receive, it makes me feel like I'm on the right path and I should carry on doing what I'm doing. Good luck with exploring music and do feel free to ask any questions or would like me to cover anything in particular. Dave
Great lesson, thank you!
Thank you for your tutorials✌️
amazing video! good job on teaching it in a way beginners can learn really easily
my playing has suffered for years due to the lack of learning these fundamentals. Thanks for this!
Very informative. I'm gonna watch this repeatedly! Thanks! I always wondered how anyone can call a song in a certain key when it changes scales and notes as it goes along and doesn't stay boxed into a neat little box we can call the key of G or key of C. When something is called the key of G it's not 100% exact but a generalization based on the majority of notes only. You are the first person I've heard explain that of course it will modulate and this is called modulation. Makes more sense now.
tremendously useful!
why is the 5t grade triad over the minor armonic scale you were demonstrating considered as mayor? isnt it the rule that 1-3-5 over a minor scale is always a minor triad?
In the 1, 4, 5 in the Minor mode; why is the 5th a major and not a minor? Is it to create a leading tone that will be resolved nicely in the tonic?
why is it out of all the seven chords that I, IV and V are chosen to be called the primary ones?
Thanks!
Great videos! What is the theory behind using a major 5th with the minor triads?
The interval of a fifth in neither major or minor, but perfect. So major and minor triads contain this interval of a perfect fifth and either have a minor third (minor triads) or a major third (major triads) above the root.
really helpful :)
Why did you make the G a G#? The normal A minor scale is all white keys. What up with that?
Because it is an A Harmonic Minor Scale, so the 7th note is raised a semitone