PTL! My Brother, your lesson blessed me because I'm a long time Hospel / Christian Jazz Drummer/ Percussionist but have taken up piano & every tutorial helps especially this one. Lord bless you vehemently. Iplay4JesusOnly 🎼
LOL!!! Nope, 100% correct. There are times in certain styles where the piano and bass player can play the same lines and it sounds great...but it not very common. I find that the hardest thing for me to do is to just chill and play the song....in other words, just play my part and shut up!
I just want to mention, you can definitely repeat notes in different octaves and emit some notes (like the 5th), and the bass note with your left hand CAN be a note other than the root (3 or 5 or 7...), it will just be less stable, and you'd usually only want that in a transition between chords. What determines an inversion is actually the lowest note overall, not (necessarily) only the right hand. Good explanation though.
Same combination on the piano...but it can be called either chord. That's the confusing thing about music theory. Depending on what key you plan the song in...you might call a certain combination of notes a different name.
Wow you're the second person I see fingering it like that with the first four fingers. Why is that? Most people use the 5th finger for the 7th and the 3rd or 4th finger for the fifth.
For its a honor to visit your chanell the video i liked most is the video about your role in the band it would be great if you could make more videos like that thank you very much and GodBless you forever
You are counting the scale starting at the root. In the key of B minor (D major) there are two sharps. C# and F#. So, B 1, C# 2, D 3, E 4, F# 5, G 6, A 7
This is amazing! I have been struggling a lot with intros and this is so helpful especially when the music leader speaks a lot before the actual music hahah
One thing if your going to teach music theory thats good but as a tip smacking your mouth and i think people know they doing it cause they will do it really loud
One thing that has always bewildered me...??? If the added 'D' makes the E chord, an E7th....... then why is the 7th note of the E major scale, an Eb or (D#) That sounds like a musical contradiction.
It's a great question! If it's an E Major 7th (EM7 Emaj7) chord...that would be the case. You would have the 1 3 5 and 7 of the E major scale. But, on a Dominant chord (E7), you flat the 7th note of the scale. BAM! Now you have the D.