This DEFINED How I Think About Chord Progressions

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 29

  • @fluxilla
    @fluxilla 4 месяца назад +5

    oh man, 0:26 - 0:33 is an absolutely tremendous riff. that whole jam was spectacular. we need an album where you just shred these legato jams for an hour

  • @alessiograziani6355
    @alessiograziani6355 3 месяца назад

    You always plays interesting chords progression. Your chords voicing sounds always so open and dreaming, never boring. To better understand, I'm referring to the chords you played at the end of the improvisation with the green guitar

  • @UnknownGuyFromSomewhere
    @UnknownGuyFromSomewhere 4 месяца назад +4

    Didn't expect to hear a rearrangement of Time of your life by Green Day, nice one!

  • @stevebuckerfield3868
    @stevebuckerfield3868 4 месяца назад +1

    Excellent video - the basics of chordal analysis so necessary for working out a song.

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 4 месяца назад +1

    I agree 100%, and this is what I do as well, and the Nashville System brings greater clarity and flexibility than the Classical System. Specifically, in the Nashville System, a song in a minor key uses the number "6" as the Tonic, whereas the Classical System uses a "i minor". The Nashville Numby System is superior for Chord Progressions, and is far easier to learn, taking only a few minutes, if that.

  • @SplooshNoonley
    @SplooshNoonley Месяц назад

    Great one thank you

  • @neal_laugman
    @neal_laugman 4 месяца назад

    Very simple put. You can really go places as the comment below pointed out with barrowed chords and modulation. Good job John!

  • @mikestillwagon5675
    @mikestillwagon5675 4 месяца назад

    This is something I have taught my students for years. Once you understand how these progressions work, you’ll understand that the overwhelming majority of songs are based on one of about a dozen (or fewer) themes. Armed with that bit of information, if you know what key a song is in you can quickly jump right in and play along. I actually love finding myself on a stage playing a song I don’t know and trying to make it look like I know what I’m doing.

  • @nedludd3641
    @nedludd3641 4 месяца назад +3

    Sting once said that he cut his teeth as a bass guitarist in a geriatric blues pub band in the North-East. The old guy at the front would gesture three fingers to the floor and everyone instantly knew which key and they all sorta followed his lead. I suspect they were doing kinda what you're talking about here maybe?

    • @Ronsharo
      @Ronsharo 4 месяца назад +2

      Didn't finish listening to the video yet. But three fingers down is three flats , three fingers up is 3 sharps and so on.

    • @SplooshNoonley
      @SplooshNoonley 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Ronsharothis is a short hand to explain the key? For Ex 3 up would be key of A major? 3 down would be Eb major

    • @yikelu
      @yikelu 4 месяца назад

      @@Ronsharo Damn, that's brilliant, going to steal that. Except I play with people that don't actually know how to deduce key from number of flats and sharps. Oh well, one day.

  • @worthmoremusic
    @worthmoremusic 4 месяца назад

    Really love my SE CE 24 Satin..... Grateful PRS finally made an affordable guitar for the masses. Best $500 spent on a guitar...PLUS it comes with a nice gig bag !

  • @jimmcdougall9973
    @jimmcdougall9973 4 месяца назад

    Yesh, the movie The Rock helped me a lot with this conundrum.

  • @TheGuitarBling
    @TheGuitarBling 4 месяца назад +1

    Great video John. I always love when you breakdown how you play. Do you aim to hit certain notes in the major scale depending on the chord that underneath. Example, are they're certain notes you like playing over a 5 chord or other chords?

  • @johndelacruz11
    @johndelacruz11 4 месяца назад

    Lovely. Chord progression plays a major part in learning and song writing. Didn’t know you were a Greenday fan mate? Cheers! 🍻

  • @GuitarsOK
    @GuitarsOK 4 месяца назад +2

    The PRS sounds good! Are you using the coils split on the intro? Sounds like it.
    Good episode. (As usual)

  • @expresidentfortune
    @expresidentfortune 4 месяца назад

    dangly tags sound good

  • @jonblake7871
    @jonblake7871 4 месяца назад

    Nice job, thanks. Are you using Boss wireless in the gig footage?

  • @bestboy897
    @bestboy897 2 месяца назад

    so we are going in 5ths the keys i mean

  • @bestboy897
    @bestboy897 2 месяца назад

    time of your life

  • @johnplaystheguitar123
    @johnplaystheguitar123 4 месяца назад +2

    Copyright Cordy

  • @rigelloar7474
    @rigelloar7474 4 месяца назад +2

    Are you nuts? "This chord we don't need to worry about". This chord you're leaving out (F#m7b5) is the most versatile of the lot, also functioning as Am6, D9, B7b9sus4, Ab7#5b9, and C6#11. No other chord type has this many ( SIX ) different uses! To leave it out, is INSANE! WTF dude?

    • @TLMuse
      @TLMuse 4 месяца назад +5

      At the start: "I think the real heart of it, for a lot of pop music... and I'm not even talking about.... jazz in THIS context...". And later: " The basic stuff in most pop music is pretty basic." Did you not catch that he is talking about pop music? When I learned the harmonized scale (back in the 1970s, from old *Guitar Player* magazine articles-no RUclips then!), I did learn the VII chord (aka half-diminished 7th), but it appears in pop songs incredibly rarely (alas, esp. these days; I have in mind a recent Beato video on how simple current pop song chord progressions are). Given the audience of this video-the lad asking this question is clearly new to these ideas-not spending time on the VII chord in 15 minutes of initial instruction seems not just *not* "nuts", but totally the right call. It's not like a viewer can't learn more after digging into what was offered here. -Tom

    • @GuiitarBilly
      @GuiitarBilly 4 месяца назад +3

      I feel like John skipped explaining F#dim in this simple chord progressions lesson because it isn’t used in much modern pop, rock or country. Pretty sure he would discussed it in a more comprehensive theory lesson or a jazz lesson. Imoho

    • @simonhall2682
      @simonhall2682 4 месяца назад

      Name a song with the seventh chord in it.

    • @rigelloar7474
      @rigelloar7474 4 месяца назад

      @@simonhall2682 Autumn Leaves, and literally THOUSANDS of other famous standards. . . . . . . .

    • @simonhall2682
      @simonhall2682 4 месяца назад

      @@rigelloar7474 anything written in the last 50 years? It’s a genuine question as I can’t think of any!