Interesting. In my country, a cadence is considered imperfect if the base line only finish on the third or the fifth degree (E or G in this case) of the chord but not the first degree (C). In french we called it « accord renversé » I think in english we say an inverted chord? (Not sure about that one lol). Love to see some cultural divergences in music theory!
Hi Kresimir? Thanks for your comment. The thumbnail should capture the attention of the user... I've putted here a cadence that anyone probably know... But as you can see in the video, I don't explain this cadence. The picture repesents only "a cadence" :-)
2 года назад+4
@@RichardusCochlearius I know, I know, it was a joke. Keep up the great work! :)
I like your style of teaching, you seem very sympathetic, good continuation !
Thank you very much!!! I hope you will enjoy all my videos! 😃😃😃
@@RichardusCochlearius Thank you ! All glory to music ! Have fun
Interesting. In my country, a cadence is considered imperfect if the base line only finish on the third or the fifth degree (E or G in this case) of the chord but not the first degree (C). In french we called it « accord renversé » I think in english we say an inverted chord? (Not sure about that one lol). Love to see some cultural divergences in music theory!
Excellent.
Thank you John
What is this II, V, I in the thumbnail? A real Musicus Practicus does not use these... :D
Hi Kresimir? Thanks for your comment. The thumbnail should capture the attention of the user... I've putted here a cadence that anyone probably know... But as you can see in the video, I don't explain this cadence. The picture repesents only "a cadence" :-)
@@RichardusCochlearius I know, I know, it was a joke. Keep up the great work! :)