🤨The Ultimate Practice Exercise: A Barry Harris Routine

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

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  • @doce7606
    @doce7606 Год назад +54

    Barry describes how in the '30s and '40s the NY kids knew this stuff (role of diminished chord) from 'old-time' hymns and rags, and then adapted it to the 'pop' tunes of the day mostly penned by European immigrants with classical music backgrounds, who also 'knew' it ... bringing us the jazz standard american songbook with its mix of afro-rhythms/dominant sounds and european harmonic forms... hip lesson to add your own neo-gospel vibe, thanks ! subscribed !

    • @harrisbeatsfrankou6304
      @harrisbeatsfrankou6304 9 месяцев назад +5

      I'm seeing it in 1890s ragtime Parlour Guitar Victory rag...and I see it in Bach's Etude 846 in C

    • @dananthony6258
      @dananthony6258 5 месяцев назад +2

      That was so well said. This might be my favorite comment of all time. 😝 lol

  • @Jazman0959
    @Jazman0959 Год назад +10

    I have been watching you for a while. Your work is truly excellent. I am an old Jazz guy. I always have loved the way Gospel keyboardist would squeeze all the good flavors out of their chords. I also loved that distinct genre sound. You can't sit through a Gospel worship service without having your soul stirred. Thank you for your video on my hero Chick Corea. Thank you for your craftsmanship and your generosity.
    Barry Harris always seemed like a guy you might run into at Walmart. Nothing special humble guy... but when you look at his work, it is like he totally reimagined Western harmony. Thank you, brother. Excellent and useful work.

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +1

      Theme do much for the insight and commentary! Appreciated!

  • @Locriantheory
    @Locriantheory 8 месяцев назад +6

    This is absolutely the most powerful video I've seen on expanding the understanding the piano.
    Bravo!!

  • @wheatworkspro
    @wheatworkspro Год назад +26

    I remember this so well in class with Barry standing over my shoulder play play play!!!lol

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +6

      Dude I forgot you were his protégé!! Ohh That’s why you be killing lol

    • @IPoopOnYouEveryLastOneOfYou
      @IPoopOnYouEveryLastOneOfYou Год назад +1

      You'll never believe what he did to a lobster that refused to play more than four notes at once. 🍗🍗

  • @wheatworkspro
    @wheatworkspro Год назад +69

    I love what you did with it. Converting it to a Gospel feel. That was one of my greatest challenges. When I took lessons with Barry how do I apply to Gospel.

  • @SoulStBlues
    @SoulStBlues Год назад +26

    This is the simplest and clearest way I've seen the 'Torture Test' explained. Thank you so much Sean, you're an amazing teacher!

  • @Bashanvibe
    @Bashanvibe Год назад +13

    I remember as a kid when my father had his advanced students come I would hear this style of teaching in the 80s!!! Bu t I like your version!!! I need to sit with that!!!

  • @ber334
    @ber334 Год назад +7

    Even though this is very basic material that most serious and professional musicians have already uncovered we need good teachers like this guy who can help the beginners and the self-taught players understand what they need to do to improve their musicality. This guy is very good

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +2

      Appreciate it!

    • @alamolalamol9426
      @alamolalamol9426 7 месяцев назад +2

      This is basic?! Pray, what comes next? Would love to hear…thanks…

  • @EliaGaitau
    @EliaGaitau Год назад +12

    Sean, you never cease to AMAZE me. I really hope someone in any of those established Jazz Faculties throughout America hires you for a few MASTER CLASSES. There's no one else breaking it down like you. God Bless from Japan.

  • @JohnHank-t8o
    @JohnHank-t8o Год назад +2

    This freestyle or this mesh of a bunch of songs sound like a song on its own and it's crazy good! Wow.

  • @whatwassaid2314
    @whatwassaid2314 Год назад +5

    Your take on this exercise sounds like Take 6 movements to me! I love this!!!

  • @carlinwoods245
    @carlinwoods245 Год назад +1

    an ancient proverb says that we die twice. once is the physical death second is the last time your name is ever mentioned. thank you young brother for keeping Dr Harris alive...

  • @MLaurence
    @MLaurence Год назад +18

    I couldn’t put my finger on what this reminded me of and then I realized this exercise is one of the songs in Zelda. I had to look it up but it’s called the fairy fountain theme. It’s just in the key of F and a major 4 instead of a minor 4

  • @sceptersax
    @sceptersax Год назад +3

    This is the exercise I’ve been waiting for my whole life.. thank you. Blessings

  • @aidensullivan4662
    @aidensullivan4662 Год назад +5

    Can you please do more breakdown videos of the Jazz academy videos! This aside from robotically playing the 6th diminished scale over and over in different directions is the first time i truly understood and implented movement into my playing! Thank you so much i may not be the mastermind Barry Harris himself but i want to sound really close to that style and you are an amazing teacher 🙌🏾🙏🏾

  • @Ficktao
    @Ficktao Год назад +2

    I like your take on this Barry Harris exercise. Could you please elaborate a little more on your additions?

  • @rogerpercival5486
    @rogerpercival5486 Год назад +1

    Sean you are so ethereal my friend I wish I could meet you God bless your one of a million points of light for Christ

  • @praisechirombo2315
    @praisechirombo2315 Год назад +1

    You make everything ridiculously easy to understand. I remember watching the original version years back and I was wishing could grasp the concept. Thank you sir!!

  • @IdesOfKnicks
    @IdesOfKnicks Год назад +1

    I like the simple explanation of theory. I need a lot more work here.

  • @AnneSajdera
    @AnneSajdera 6 месяцев назад

    Your expansion of Barry Harris's exercise is just beautiful. The exercise was beautiful to begin with, but now it's just beauty on beauty...

  • @merveilkioto933
    @merveilkioto933 Год назад +1

    I think this is what I was lacking to make more movements in my playing. Because, I learned this about Barry Harris, but I needed much understanding on how to use it. You are helping us with your amazing ear and teaching skills. Thank you.

  • @Cozy_Infamous
    @Cozy_Infamous Год назад +2

    i saw barry harris video's when i just started playing the keys and as a beginner i went way over my head with all of this. thank you for giving me the chance to revisit the legend's teachings!! 🙏💫

  • @maxbryk
    @maxbryk Год назад +3

    Great vid man! Moving that melody to the left hand is so nice. First thing I thought of hearing this was Todd Galberth Lord you are good. Has that lick at one point in the arrangement

  • @sambrousemusic
    @sambrousemusic Год назад

    Great fairy fountain!

  • @annonymeandfish
    @annonymeandfish Год назад

    Genius, since the sequence repeats after that, you have 3 of these sequences , [diminished chords] , 3 family to go trough. And you can get mastery of this sound, these tentions!

  • @DJazium
    @DJazium 2 месяца назад

    This is amazing - I just started practicing. I can tell that if I do it every day it's gonna add a lot of my playing

  • @eugenebrown3281
    @eugenebrown3281 5 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing Barry's concepts.

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  5 месяцев назад

      Yeah man! Thanks so much for the support!

  • @hermannakpa6116
    @hermannakpa6116 Год назад +1

    Yes @SEAN YOU ARE A GOOD TEATCHER

  • @mwangikelvin546
    @mwangikelvin546 Год назад +2

    Sean Sean !!! Thanks for sharing your experience with the world…. This video has explained and exposed secrets that open up unlimited possibilities in musicality!!!! RESPECT TO YOU SIR

  • @alweathers9025
    @alweathers9025 Год назад +1

    Thanks for another well explained lesson Sean.. i really appreciate you.🙏🏾

  • @Chiefmusician3
    @Chiefmusician3 Год назад +3

    Wow! Sean you are very much appreciated bro! I love learning stuff like this. You are a phenomenal musician and an excellent teacher! 👏🏽

  • @elident7828
    @elident7828 4 месяца назад

    Thx for demystifying the great Barry Harris chords never understood it or why to learn it !

  • @iplay4iam
    @iplay4iam Год назад +2

    What a blessing incorporating this into my practice - not today but tuhday lol

  • @johnrothfield6126
    @johnrothfield6126 9 месяцев назад

    Musical wisdom.

  • @alamolalamol9426
    @alamolalamol9426 7 месяцев назад

    14:52 Your application of this exercise here was really helpful Sean - thanks 😊…

  • @andrekillian8732
    @andrekillian8732 11 месяцев назад

    Super Dope!

  • @JoshuaStormmusic
    @JoshuaStormmusic Год назад

    Sheeesh... I'm definitely jumping on this. Thanks a lot, Sean!

  • @joeymorris4787
    @joeymorris4787 5 месяцев назад +1

    "Excellent Brutha!" THX!!

  • @joshuasamson6024
    @joshuasamson6024 Год назад +1

    This is a real rich sound. Thank you so much. I will really have to practice and practice until I understand it well

  • @veebran7845
    @veebran7845 Год назад

    This was so eloquent I have to learn it. It'll change everything for me

  • @JP-vj8tt
    @JP-vj8tt Месяц назад

    Definitely gonna try and learn this. Thx for sharing bro

  • @salehhayati1080
    @salehhayati1080 6 месяцев назад +1

    I've been shedding this for 6 hours straight. it's really tricky to figure out on the fly!

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  6 месяцев назад

      Wow man, 6 hours?! You gotta break it up!

  • @denisblack9897
    @denisblack9897 Год назад

    i'm trying this on guitar tonight!
    seems very beneficial

  • @donmilland7606
    @donmilland7606 Год назад +1

    wow this video is excellent!

  • @josephgiuseppedegregorio4553
    @josephgiuseppedegregorio4553 Год назад

    Great job brother, you're blessed with the gift of teaching. Praise The Lord for you.

  • @sandalero
    @sandalero Год назад +1

    you're a beast sean!

  • @mikebozik
    @mikebozik 8 месяцев назад +1

    It'll be another hundred years before we can fully flesh out what Barry Harris did for music. Kind of like Bach, where people forgot about him for a while but then was rediscovered.

  • @Rafaelfo.
    @Rafaelfo. Год назад

    Great video, great pace - I watched the whole thing. Cheers

  • @bartie55
    @bartie55 Год назад

    this is great

  • @othinielkatembokainda294
    @othinielkatembokainda294 Год назад

    You're a Great teacher Sean Thank you

  • @JohnHank-t8o
    @JohnHank-t8o Год назад

    You're good man, I hope I grasp this music theory understanding soon.

  • @samuelkissi6634
    @samuelkissi6634 Год назад

    Awesome Sean🤗. Thanks so much for this breakdown and not only that but also how to apply it. The application of it is always where the difficulty lies.
    You have indeed simplified everything🔥

  • @lamarredavy8145
    @lamarredavy8145 Год назад +1

    Ooh waaaw i love that move !

  • @MrFingazNYC
    @MrFingazNYC Год назад

    What a great video. Great stuff as usual

  • @theoryman2
    @theoryman2 Год назад +3

    Thank so much, Doc. We appreciate this so much, you've taken it to a new level! Blessing to you...

  • @eliasviana9342
    @eliasviana9342 Год назад

    Great thanks ❤

  • @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic
    @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic Год назад +1

    This is amazing

  • @vladfarcam4817
    @vladfarcam4817 Год назад +1

    instant subscribe

  • @maximesavard-beaudoin560
    @maximesavard-beaudoin560 Год назад

    awesome vid

  • @hakeemfayomi7776
    @hakeemfayomi7776 Год назад

    So nice

  • @CarlLaventure
    @CarlLaventure Год назад +1

    Sean! You the man bro! Such a beautiful exercise. Melody on the bottom is 🔥Lowkey reminds me of the melody from Andrae Crouch's song "The Promise". Keep up the great work my guy

  • @gvibes9223
    @gvibes9223 Год назад +3

    I Swear ur the 🐐…

    • @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic
      @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic Год назад

      He is a lamb, like all sons of God.
      You know God isn't likened to a goat😅.
      Yeah, I know what you mean tho.

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      Appreciate it man!

  • @homerdus9668
    @homerdus9668 Год назад

    How about finger positions, is there a routine ? Especially with melody here.

  • @reinh
    @reinh Год назад +15

    For Barry Harris, it's the diminished chord (Ddim) that connects those four keys, not the minor chord. These four keys are "family" because they share the same diminished chord. This chord has a dominant function in each key so C and Eb aren't connected by Fm, they are connected by Ddim, a.k.a. Fdim, which functions as G7b9 in C and Bb7b9 in Eb. Your approach isn't "wrong"; it sounds great. It's just not what Barry taught.

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +7

      hey thanks for writing. You're correct that I am not explaining Barry's approach here, but rather how his exercise has helped me. For me, the diminished chord is used to help with the order of what notes to practice in, but I am not seeing them as "connecting" chords. They just tell me what key to play next. I am using "connected" in the case of the Fmin, is because it happens to be in both keys (4 of C and 2 of Eb) so it helps me to see it as a sort of pivot chord for weaving in between those keys for gospel musicians (my channel is more gospel, a jazz approach could be entirely different)... Appreciate your comment!!

    • @ber334
      @ber334 Год назад +4

      @@SeanWilsonPiano also I know you didn't want to explain it this way so as not to confuse the self-taught and beginners out there who you are trying to help but what's more important is the sound that you are hearing and not necessarily the name or the label that we put on it. It's someone called something an f-minor and someone else calls it a. D dim you're really splitting hairs. The teachers explanation of why he's calling it and f-minor makes complete sense because now you're talkin about functionality. Why confuse the beginning student with the diminished concept when it's easier for the beginner to understand that f-minor is now the two chord of the new key Eb major. A seasoned player can readily interchange d diminished and f-minor but not so much the beginning student or the self-taught player who has not analyze something like this yet

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +4

      ​@@ber334 appreciate the comment, "splitting hairs lol"--- Since my target audience is mostly gospel musicians, most who already play well, but new to theory, they don't understand a lot of these "nuances..." or why they matter to the song, so my videos are actually speaking to them... however, I do depend on the jazz guys to provide context where appropriate but don't want to get into the "weeds" with it, if you know what I mean

    • @ber334
      @ber334 Год назад +1

      @@SeanWilsonPiano exactly that's what I was trying to say !!!!

    • @tr00gaze
      @tr00gaze Год назад +3

      That's why it's called music "theory" - cause people argue over it

  • @showrunner2183
    @showrunner2183 Год назад +2

    Sean can you transcribe any song from Quenell and Jamar jones album. I’m a premium member btw. Pleaseeeee

  • @CaeSharp
    @CaeSharp 10 месяцев назад

    7:25 Don't understand what the Gb is doing there theoretically in this context. Sounds good and familiar tho.

  • @klausbantzer4077
    @klausbantzer4077 Год назад

    Maybe you should revisit the F# block - in # scales are no b chords……

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      yes, this is correct. This is a gospel thing, we don't like saying A# lol...

  • @JohnHank-t8o
    @JohnHank-t8o Год назад +1

    Wow you really know your stuff lol, but how come some of the extra notes just don't sound well together? Is it supposed to or is it just an exercise? Because when I'm making beats and I use the piano roll, my cords they sound good together but idk if those cords are real cords and if they work together they sound good together, but then I got some "progression cords" at like 8 or 9 keys including top melody and my bass keys start to sound distorted in a way.. but when I take some away the sound starts to feel empty.. hard to explain haha trying to figure out how piano works, I can freestyle well I just can't understand music theory no matter how it's taught. It's weird. Haha

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      yeah I hear you, I think you gotta understand that "sounds" are subjective. So there could be some chord progressions in there that your ears just don't like, and that's ok. We all have our preferences. The goal of this channel is to experiment, find what you like, and create your own sound from the things you DO like

  • @19tet
    @19tet 9 месяцев назад

    now every time i come across a minor iV ill alw think abt how i can modulate to that key a minor third away n up - good exercise to practice modal interchange?

  • @pbfotografiert
    @pbfotografiert 4 месяца назад +1

    Part one is intuitive, part two (the revised routine) falls apart: What exactly are you doing there? How can I practice it? Which notes should I use?

    • @sheilamacdougal4874
      @sheilamacdougal4874 11 дней назад

      Just follow the video slowly and repeat according to need. It's crystal clear.

  • @rafaelmaia4531
    @rafaelmaia4531 Месяц назад

    Genio

  • @Mignuke
    @Mignuke Год назад

    Can you please cover any of the songs from Cory Henry’s newest album? It’s truly inspiring

  • @abbos_axiy
    @abbos_axiy 10 месяцев назад

    13:40 what's the song were you playing ?

  • @samrogers6890
    @samrogers6890 Год назад +1

    How does Barry Harris choose the four keys and their order to cycle through the chords ?

    • @stackman1525
      @stackman1525 Год назад +1

      The four keys are a minor third apart, which happens to create a closed octave loop (a m3 above A is back to C). So there are a total of three loops: one "starting" on C, one on C#, and one on D.

    • @samrogers6890
      @samrogers6890 Год назад +1

      Thanks for answering.
      1. I understand the minor third relationship between the four keys and how they form a closed octave loop.
      2. How did you determine that there are three other octave loops mentioned above, “starting on keys C, C#, and D,” in this example?
      3. Can Berry Harris’s technique apply to these other loops as well?
      4. 😊If your explanation is
      too lengthy for this format, what source do you recommend, that I can learn more about this idea?
      Thanks a bunch! You’ve already been very helpful.

    • @stackman1525
      @stackman1525 Год назад

      ​@@samrogers6890 So, by the definition of a loop, you'd agree that the loop "starting" on C is the same as the loop "starting" on Eb, right? What notes between C and Eb would be skipped over by this particular loop?
      I don't have specific resources to point you toward, but I think you need to hammer into your mind the distinction between *pitches* (i.e., notes) and *intervals* (the spaces between pitches). This "technique", just like literally every other melody playable on the piano, is just a series of intervals. When you sing Happy Birthday, does it /need/ to start on exactly B-natural for you to recognize it as Happy Birthday?
      This practice technique is just a specific melody (i.e., series of intervals) that gets your hands, fingers, and ears working in a particular way that is distinctly useful for jazz and gospel styles of piano. The only way I could imagine a melody "not working" in a different key on piano is if you physically run out of keys on one side of the keyboard... in which case you can shift the entire thing up/down by an octave and try again. :D

  • @sheddybhulji8196
    @sheddybhulji8196 6 месяцев назад

    Hi , any chance of getting the music score. Thanks

  • @19tet
    @19tet 9 месяцев назад

    14:08 ayyee 😂

  • @mrlighthou5e796
    @mrlighthou5e796 3 месяца назад +1

    Around the 2:40 mark, How come the 6 isn't Db instead of D when you go to the F minor.

  • @sandrovilanova314
    @sandrovilanova314 Год назад

    Na parte do exercicio revisado, não peguei a logica da mão esquerda, como a progressão harmonica trabalhou. Alguem poderia dar uma ajuda?

  • @mahlonstrachan8075
    @mahlonstrachan8075 Год назад

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @ewwitsantonio
    @ewwitsantonio Год назад

    Can really hear what may have influenced the Zelda Fountain theme

  • @MrYoungpianoplayer
    @MrYoungpianoplayer Год назад

    Can someone tell me what VST's Sean uses?

  • @kwamepi1
    @kwamepi1 Год назад

    I like this

  • @mjtthifb10
    @mjtthifb10 Год назад

    I was kinda lost with the application of the revised version, didn't which moves were being used

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      Hey most of the application for the songs were taken from the 1st measure of the revised version, and loosely placed where my ear thought they could fit

    • @mjtthifb10
      @mjtthifb10 Год назад

      @@SeanWilsonPiano Thank you!

  • @jamessullivan1830
    @jamessullivan1830 Год назад +1

    Why can we play the minor 4th of the major scale? Beginner theorist here looking for help

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +2

      Hey James, typically the 4th chord in the scale is major, in this exercise it is minor because we are switching keys. The minor 4, is the same as the minor 2 in the new key

    • @ransomqhouhx7
      @ransomqhouhx7 Год назад +1

      Beautiful explanation

    • @jamessullivan1830
      @jamessullivan1830 Год назад +1

      @@SeanWilsonPiano Thank you for explaining that, music theory still seems so confusing at this stage. I appreciate your content.

    • @ugajin7348
      @ugajin7348 Год назад +1

      @@jamessullivan1830 The tonic notes keys: C E♭ F♯ A, or C E♭ G♭ B𝄫 are each a minor 3rd apart, which is also a C°7 chord.

  • @musiqisme26
    @musiqisme26 Год назад

    @sean question, would the “2” chord of the upcoming key be seen as the “5” setup to the new key, especially with the no 5 and the 7th added?

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      Hmm, my ear tells me it could be a type of 5 into the new key...

  • @jaysilver9030
    @jaysilver9030 Год назад +3

    Sounds like a progression from Zelda Ocarina of time

  • @obakengandreck7051
    @obakengandreck7051 Год назад

    I'm new to piano. Why is the 4th Chord a minor? Always hear 4th is major

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад +1

      The 4 chord is minor in THIS exercise

    • @obakengandreck7051
      @obakengandreck7051 Год назад

      @@SeanWilsonPiano thank you

    • @barrymurray6959
      @barrymurray6959 10 месяцев назад

      I was wondering why is he says that the 6 note of d minor is B when it’s actually B flat?

  • @LonzCantiLife
    @LonzCantiLife 5 месяцев назад

    first part in C sounds like "World 3" from super mario 3... the underwater land lol

  • @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic
    @HeavenlyBridegroomMusic Год назад

    Ooooooooweeee❤

  • @barrymurray6959
    @barrymurray6959 10 месяцев назад

    I was wondering why is he says that the 6 note of d minor is B when it’s actually B flat?

    • @mathieuvallieres2993
      @mathieuvallieres2993 5 месяцев назад

      Being the second chord of the next key it implies the dorian mode which has a natural 6th instead of a flatted 6th in the natural minor scale (aeolian mode)

  • @JohnHank-t8o
    @JohnHank-t8o Год назад

    I didn't know two white keys next to each other work like that

  • @peterwoodward540
    @peterwoodward540 2 месяца назад

    This reminds me of the Fairy Fountain theme from Zelda.

  • @bobbywebster2174
    @bobbywebster2174 Год назад

    fairy fountain

  • @sandalero
    @sandalero 3 месяца назад

    this here. i found it. !!!

  • @56844398
    @56844398 Месяц назад

    okay, this is gonna be fun, if Sean is already struggling with the keys ... 😬

  • @avidreader6534
    @avidreader6534 Год назад

    How does one get as good as domi? Like what is the best way to get close to her skill level while not going to top notch music schools

    • @MrAshtonK
      @MrAshtonK Год назад +3

      Use a metronome and get your scales and arpeggios up to 140 eighth notes controlled

    • @avidreader6534
      @avidreader6534 Год назад +1

      @@MrAshtonK thank you. What scales should I focus on and then graduate to? I only know c major, and A. I can figure out the other major and minor scales pretty quickly but I don’t know them. And Anything else you recommend to practice or videos?? I’ll definitely be doing that

    • @MrAshtonK
      @MrAshtonK Год назад +2

      @@avidreader6534 all 12 major scales. You just need like 10 years of speed

    • @avidreader6534
      @avidreader6534 Год назад

      @@MrAshtonK 😂😭 thanks. Is it possible to do it in 5? And other things that are important?

    • @MrAshtonK
      @MrAshtonK Год назад +2

      @@avidreader6534 yes, a teacher. You wanna be domi self taught... Good luck. Pay a professor or someone professional weekly or bi-weekly. Hold yourself accountable and play pieces that apply the exercises.

  • @Sn00ze
    @Sn00ze Год назад +2

    The first exercise reminds me of Zelda music for some reason... The fairy fountain theme ruclips.net/video/5aX_IZr_a9Y/видео.html

    • @gumong3502
      @gumong3502 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/tF-XoYlGy34/видео.html

  • @luar8286
    @luar8286 Год назад

    soo no body noticed the zelda fairy fountain theme?

  • @brianbernstein3826
    @brianbernstein3826 Месяц назад

    the harmonic analysis by Sean and Harris is incorrect. Here is the correct analysis:
    A minor first inversion, B diminished first inversion, C major first inversion, D diminished first inversion
    C minor first inversion, D diminished first inversion, Eb major first inversion, F diminished first inversion
    Eb minor first inversion, F diminished first inversion, Gb major first inversion, Ab diminished first inversion
    F# minor first inversion, G# diminished first inversion, A major first inversion, B diminished first inversion
    It's just downright irresponsible for teachers with influence over so many people, to not check themselves before completing misinforming the masses. Masses which are clueless to the fact that they've just been taught incorrectly.

  • @texanfrog1750
    @texanfrog1750 Год назад +1

    its the barry harris scale
    edit: can someone tell me why people keep calling it gospel when it is scriabin(the sus stuff), or is it different somehow?

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      Not sure if I understand your question but we’re not teaching the scale in this video. I’m teaching the practice routine shown at the beginning of the video

    • @texanfrog1750
      @texanfrog1750 Год назад

      ​@@SeanWilsonPiano​ I know I was just pointing out that the resolving stuff you talked about was based on the scale. The question is (at 9:11-9:23) you play a chord that is really just the mystic chord by scriabin. I was just wondering if in jazz(as it isn't called mystic and instead sus(i understand it stands for suspended)) it is different than Scriabin's chord, and if so how?

    • @SeanWilsonPiano
      @SeanWilsonPiano  Год назад

      @@texanfrog1750 oh ok got you, actually I’ve never heard that term ‘Scriabin’ so I’ll have to look into that. I’m more of an ear player than theory so I just pretty much discovered this voicing while practicing and figured I’d adopt to the routine. Great points tho and definitely smth for me to research further

    • @texanfrog1750
      @texanfrog1750 Год назад +3

      @@SeanWilsonPiano Now Way!!!! Scriabin is a classical composer. Listen to sonata 5, it will blow your mind. I'm so happy because if you have the patience to listen it will really widen your scopes. If you haven't heard of scriabin, you probably haven't listened to others either. Please listen to that and also Ondine by Ravel, it might seem a bit boring from the start, but please do. You will not regret it, they are both complete masterpieces!

    • @musical_lolu4811
      @musical_lolu4811 Год назад

      ​@@texanfrog1750 For me, music is music; the labels and eponyms aren't as big a deal as you're making them out to be. Stuff like the Mystic chord, the Tristan chord, the Picardy cadence, Barry Harris' 'scale of chords', and my favorite in jazz - the 'backdoor progression', while they are great as common terms of reference, may be termed differently in other circles. Why is that suddenly a problem?