after many years of studying and learning music theory via the internet I finally found someone who explained intervals in a clear and easy way thank you!
Make music theory easier to understand and clearer to visualize on piano with this simple method 👉ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VY1DqT0fdsI.html Get your helpful Intervals PDF Here 👉 bit.ly/2UWaVxO
I'm a youngster and just learning piano on my own, I guess I'm learning things some people don't learn years into playing bec they prob didnt know about it. Lucky me and lucky u that I liked the vid
I have some questions Im a self taught and dont take any lessons My passion is guitar but I want to learn piano first to make things easier so practising takes time and I really started from scratch learning also music theory in sheet So now I thanfully learnt how to play all major scales right and left hands and will learn all major scales ( minor scales will be easy bc just flat the 2nd note on triads) what about the minor scales , ik know to find the equivalent by moving 3 half steps but stil its different shape and fingering how could I learn this in an easy way? and another What should I do to recognize notes ,chords and scales by ear? this seems very difficult to me. anyone has any suggestions? Lastly, Now ik names chords scales, ill practise intervals how exactly can I apply these in improvising I still feel I cant play the piano I just understand it how can intervals help me I dont want to get so much deep in piano I want to at least improvise or play some songs even in a slow tempo or with bit stammering someone please reply :(
It finally makes sense. Thanks for this vid. So glad you added that last tid bit at the end showing an example starting from another note. That is what all other videos I have watched on this subject seemed to be missing, or perhaps I was missing it. Either way great explanation. You covered the topic thoroughly enough that I dont want to ask the instructor any question. And you managed to do it in only 10 minutes!
Hello, I am trying to learn everything I can from nice persons as yourself. I am on very limited income. I have a question.... 6:04 from C D flat would be called a minor 6:09 second and then that D would be the 6:12 major second we tend to use a lowercase Wouldn't it be C, Cflat, then D?
C major has no sharps or flats. So I thought it’s minor also has no sharps or flats. I am very confused when playing a c minor “chord” I am getting mixed up.
Thankyou so much . I just started studying intervals and I needed something a bit more than I was getting in my theory books. This is it . I am learning a good deal more of what I want. Top sort !
Yes so in C major for example, C is the root (number 1) but if you’re in G major, G would be the root. Then in those scales you can describe how far the other notes are from their root. You can do this with chords too and also just describe how far any 2 notes are with intervals
No it's not. It's usually clearer to just learn things from the note C to begin with. Sometimes we reference the root of the key you're in (the scale you're using essentially so in the key of G, G is the root), sometimes the root of the chord you're on at the time and sometimes we just talk about the distance one note moves to another, perhaps in a melody. In the last case, we wouldn't really call it a 'root' but we consider it number 1 if we're just measuring how far apart 2 things are