Incomplete chromatic upper neighbor: Metallica's Battery opens with that. And smashes every clown who ever said that chromatic upper neighbors are not okay. \m/ (Plus I dig the Return of the Whiteboard!)
@@aylbdrmadison1051 I would suspect that most nursery rhymes don't use neighbor notes. "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" only uses chord tones, for instance.
Hello! You have the most enjoyable guitar channel I know of on RU-vid, and you have a rare trait for RU-vid musical channels: you know how to teach. Good job!
Thanks, this concept is much easier to grasp and appreiciate when well known examples are used as you have here. As always, you present material ever mindful of how viewers learn.
I noticed that your “both neighbor tones” example sounded incredibly familiar until I realized that Nick Cave’s “God Is In The House” starts off with almost the exact same melody line note for note! Except there’s an added E between the F and D. ;)
I knew I would find this comment if I just kept reading. lols Generally speaking, my neighbors aren't very sexy though. 😐 If they were I'd probably turn off youtube and start playing guitar.
(1) You misspelled "neighbor", Tommaso ... 8-) (2) "Neighbor note" is a translation from the German music theory term Nebennote, which is a bit more general. (3) "Double neighbor note" ... Why is this singular grammatically, not plural? 8-) (4) I once used the phrase "smash the like button" elsewhere, and the response was that I shouldn't endorse violence against buttons! (Really!) (5) I don't recall whether you've done a video on passing notes. Maybe that's next week's video?
3. I don't know, but I've always seen it written singular. I thought it was a peculiarity of English. It's not like there's a lack of them... 4. Stealing this.