What is the largest chord possible in music theory? I don't know, but maybe this is. Personal Harmony and Music Theory Lessons: www.leonwaves.... Instagram/Twitter: @leon_waves
This comment was like a dark cloud for me. I am a college music major and i have to sight sing tomorrow. I also play piano and NOT jazz, so this chord is a nightmare to me
Ah, yes, the Cmaj21x47#45x43#41x39#37#35#33#31#29#27#25#23#19#15#11 chord. Such a common chord that everyone knows, yes, quite. I remember the first time I grew 20 extra arms and played it. When my parents finally knew I should study music instead.
THE SUPER DUPER MEGA MULTI ULTRA PHI OMEGA MEGA ULTIMATE BETA GAMMA DELTA ALPHA TRUE TARTARUS TUSUEGRA DEMONIC MEGA LYDIAN LARGEST CHORD: C21 x9999....#11
I always called this the "motherchord". There are all 48 triads. I used to set up a string patch on an electric keyboard, play this exact chord (rooted from C3), and leave the piano bench on the sustain pedal . . . Whoever walked into the practice room the next day would hear our lovely motherchord at a nice soft (eerie) volume.
I was going to comment that this chord has some serious Zelda vibes when I got to 4:55 lol. I’m not sure if that was intentional but it made me smile! Awesome video
If you didn't know, a good chunk of (if not all) Legend of Zelda music is written in the lydian mode, likely c lydian or close to it. That's probably why!
Happens when you start programming as well... words just don’t look like words anymore, or they look like they should be spelled differently; even though they are spelled correctly
I came here for the thumbnail and ended up getting a music theory lesson. Kinda amazing how much more I learn from RU-vid than 11 years of piano lessons without even trying.
I’m always fascinated when the fact that music is just math perks up a little, when you said it can only be played 7 different places that blew my mind, since there’s typically 7 degrees in a scale and a chord that plays all 12 notes only working 7 ways is like poetic
JamesAndGames this is all really simple once you break it down. it’s just “the 4th, the 5th. the minor fall and the major lift” no so sure why everyone’s confused
Imagine jammin' with your band when you turn to the piano player and you're like: "Yo, gimme a C major 21 double sharp 47 sharp 45 double sharp 43 sharp 41 double sharp 39 sharp 37 sharp 35 sharp 33 sharp 31 sharp 29 sharp 27 sharp 25 sharp 23 sharp 19 shar 15 sharp 11" And he's like: "Bruh... ಠ_ಠ "
When I read this i laughed so hard that I was crying while im otp with my friend and she asked am I alright? And im like let me tell this comment my church pianoist and see what he says
Coming across videos like this is like being thrown into a fucking tornado. None of it makes sense. I can't follow it at all. I have quite literally zero musical education and as someone who is mathy, trying to follow this monstrous system of scaling hurts.
@@AnaseSkyrider ikr they call the ratio 3:2 a fifth! Just remember that a lot of musicians don't understand the maths that underlies what they do. You have some valuable stuff to teach them too.
@@thumper8684 what do you mean by ratio 3:2? My understanding of a fifth is the interval created by playing the 1 and 5 of a scale hence 5th. Is there something else to it I’m missing?
@@ultraclipz3230 Perfect musical intervals are based on harmonic ratios. That is what makes them sound pleasant. You go up an octave the frequency of the pitch is doubled. You go up a perfect fifth, the frequency is mulitplied by 3/2. A fifth is not necessarily a perfect fifth, and in standard tuning it is a smidge off.
There's no help for you.... I mean, how can responders arrive on the scene if you didn't give your address This comment was sponsored by #staysafeontheinternet
@@pikksen7905 2000 and ME were different operating systems. 2000 was based on NT while ME was still on the same branch as Windows 98. 2000 was using NTFS while ME was still using FAT32.
I tought this was a textbook curiosity only, then at the end of the video it showed this actually sung! Thanks for the last bit, it calidated previous content enormouusly!
There's only ONE "Return", and it's not "of the King", It's the Return of the- No wait, no wait, You're kidding! He didn't just say What I think he did, Did he? And Dr. Dre said:
Gabriel Fauré Simon made a video in response to Jacob’s interview part 2. He just sang what Jacob was unable to sing completely. (Not sure if Simon sang every note or if he pitch shifted some.) Yes, I do have absolute pitch, but it doesn’t have much to do with Jacob’s D7 chord, since June notated the notes and Simon sang them.
Oki doki crash course in octaves: Because of the way pitch works on a physical level (ie molecules vibrating at frequencies), we can basically sort out pitches into groups of eight (therefore octaves, like octopus or octagon ), meaning that if you played all the white notes on a piano, no matter which one you started on, every eighth note would be exactly the same note as every first note except it would sound higher. If you simplified this concept even further; I could find a wood block and hit it, producing a sound. If I then cut that block exactly in half and hit it again (according to the physical laws of pitch), the sound it produces this time would be exactly the same sound but one octave higher. Hope that helped :)
No real mathematician worth his or her salt would ever say that. Ever. The imagination of every single good mathematician by far outstrips the imagination of the most imaginative musician, poet, writer or lover.
They might say they need more context to understand what exactly is meant by it, but every single good mathematician will immediately have bunch of interpretations, what this notation might mean.
1:50 took me ages to figure out. Sounded familiar, like a Windows error but I know my computer doesn't make that sound. My dad pointed out our Windows 98 used to make that error sound. I don't even know how I remember it, because I was 5 when we got XP.