This was great, I have been researching "what piano chords sound good together" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Nonason Ranincoln Genie - (do a search on google )? It is a smashing one off product for discovering how to play the piano like a pro minus the hard work. Ive heard some super things about it and my buddy got cool results with it.
Lisa, Lisa! You are singlehandedly improving my understanding of chords by bounds - not just leaps. Love 💕 you. Thank you so much. I also can’t afford lessons - enter Lisa : ) So thankful!
EVERYTHING is here for our instruction: great material, great presentation, and GREAT enthusiasm.... for playing and for feeling good about doing so. I played these chords and was smiling all day. THANKS!!! Learn 1 key per week... that's a BIG pile of keys under your hand in one year!!!!!
I started playing piano as an adult for the first time on 10/2020. I have been playing about 2 to 3 hours a day since then and taking 1 lesson a week with an instructor. As a beginner, I actually understand this!! I see the pattern and it makes perfect sense. I can actually enjoy playing chords and it sounds really nice. Thank you so much for this lesson. This is gold!!
Brilliant and insightful as always! Thanks for your honesty and hard work. Those diminished chords are always crazy, but a great way to snap attention back if you've been floating in major chords for a while.
Only recently discovered your channel and am really enjoying it. Some very simple sounding but very useful things explained perfectly and with great suggestions for both practicing and using.
Oh wow! I was just trying to learn this for my first time last year. All this time I thought a Diatonic family was a group of 6 chords made up of 1-4-5 Major & associated Minors. (C Am | F Dm | G Em). Thanks for your insight. I can never get music theory straight in my head 🥴 Love your videos by the way!
I really like your style... Am turning 70 this year with 30s attitude while going on 100. Your enthusiasm and unique approach is great at renewing my faith - with hands and style catching up - remembering it all, after avoiding the 88 key approach for too many decades, keep it up! It's nice using a portable midi controller with adequate key weight and choice of 4 awesome 9 foot grands [never need tuning either] at my finger tips - feeling spoiled happy after 2 decades since the Millennium! Another keyboardist friend that was a piano tuner when we met 40 years back is still strictly 'old school' and lumbers around with his upright in tow - while I say why bother when you can simply carry the thing and load it in a car?
Going to finally be buying my first MIDI keyboard very soon and this video has helped me immensely! This is going to be one of the first things I apply into the sounds I hear that will come when learning to play chords. To really hear what sounds good with what from the get go, and then learn all the different ways to mix and create music with them.
@Pianote Long story short - My understanding of the music theory -> If a song is written in just one key (and i suppose most of them are written this way), and it is said "This song is in C Major", that means that ALL the notes (ALL OF THEM) played in that song need to be in The C Major scale (CDEFGAB). Am i right? If it includes other notes (like for example a D#), it means the most fundamental rules are broken and the person who composed that song was lacking some knowledge. Maybe there are songs which have this kind of mistakes, but they are mistakes and it would be nicer if they wouldn't be there. This is my understanding of the music theory, as a beginner. Am i right or did i misunderstood? Now comes the question. Cubase has a "Chord track" feature which helps you create chord progressions (it suggests the next chord based on the previous one). Now, if my first chord was C Major (and my song is supposedly a C Major song), why does Cubase suggest me D Major chord as one of the best choices for the second chord in my chord progression? D Major chord contains the note F#, which is NOT in the C Major scale. Isn't that a BIG and fundamental mistake? To make the things harder still, Cubase names D minor (a chord which has all its notes in the C Major scale, and, by my understanding, should fit closely into my chord progression, next to C Major chord) an unlikely match and puts it on a distant row, far away from my Initial C Major chord, to let me know that i should not use it. Do you see my puzzle? If you can see it, that means you also see where my understand of music theory stops working. Can you, please, put me back on track and help me understand what is happening? Thanks in advance!
Wow great question, thank you! Yes if a song is written in one key (which most are) then all the notes "should" be from that key. However, music is art. It is not so strict that rules cannot be broken. So if a song in the key of C has a D# it's not necessarily a mistake and the composer is not lacking knowledge. These notes that are outside the key are called "accidentals" and they can actually make the sound sound incredible! Listen to any jazz piano song and it will be full of them :) So from a basic standpoint you are correct, but as with all things the more you learn about the rules the more you learn that they can all be broken haha
This helped so much😁 if I am going to be honest when I saw 1, 5, 2 for chord progression I had no idea what it meant. I have been playing piano for 2 years now. This is gonna help me a lot with beat making!!! Thank you so much.
I only today heard that chords can be out of scale, I searched google and found the term "diatonic chords" and had to search about it, and then I found this video, I'm watching because I already watch your videos
Oh my gosh, thank you!!!😁😁😁😁💖💖💖 I have also played many years, and never heard this term til TODAY! And I've been searching for the proper term for over a year, now!😂😁 I've been calling it a chord cycle, for lack of knowledge of the proper term, I don't know how I had so many years of piano, orchestra, choir, etc, and no one ever bothered to teach THIS concept, or relative major/ minor keys, ugh! I picked up guitar last year, and I swear I've learned more about music on you tube than years of teachers ever gave me!😁💖
oh man, 30 seconds in and you're describing my whole musical dilemma. I had lessons as a kid but was never interested in learning theory, so I have a richer practical ability but a patchy understanding of theory and its hard to decipher what i already know and what I need to learn. Thank you for these videos and the way you explain concepts!
You are so good at teaching ❤ keep it up i only played piano for a year and snappad this upp myself witout knowing its namn diaonic. I use one key a day :)
I really like the way yu are explaining sound by terminology I fully understand - sad, happy, uplifting....major/minor/diminished does not tell me much:), thank you!
Hey! This is the second video where u mention diatonic chords importance and I thank you so much for it cause that REALLY helped me and I don't really get why this is not the one first thing beginners learn when they come to learn chords.... This is all about piano!! Though if I may - and maybe it's a choice you've made - I'm surprised you never mention the cycle of fifth that is so helpful so as to learn all these chords and the logic of their progression! Thanks a lot anyway I've been following your classes for a week and omg I've improved my skills so much!!!!!!! Cheers!!
Thanks Guillaume!! We kept the Circle of 5ths out of this and the other video because we don't want to overwhelm new learners! We do have separate lessons on the Circle of 5ths. I'm so glad you're seeing an improvement!!! Keep it up!
I noticed that I wasn't making any progress in my music theory course. I was sent to a a specialist at our local Music Conservatory who asked my my piano lessons history. i told him that I was having trouble identifying major and minor chords on Pianote. He said that was a well known problem. No can be sad listening to even a minor chord if it's played by Lisa.
ANOTHER GREAT VIDEO LISA ! THANKS FOR HELPING ME TO UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF DIATONIC CHORDS. I THOUGHT DIATONIC MEANT DIA = 2 AND TONIC MEANT TONES WHICH TRANSLATED IN MY SIMPLE LANGUAGE MEANS 2 TONE ( OR NOTE ) CHORDS ! ( LOL ! ). THANKS AGAIN LISA - I CAN NOW ENJOY CREATING MORE RELEVANT CHORDS IN MY SONGWRITING !
You say to "keep following the rules".. did I miss what the rules are? How do you find the diatonic chords in a given key...? I mean besides c. Is it possible to figure out the chords from another key?
So in picking out a melody of a pop song, should the chords in that key work best with it or are there other related chords I could use? I played the melody to “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” by Diana Ross and found that it was in E flat major. Some of the chords in the scale worked, but others sounded a little off. Are there other associated chords I could use or am I getting ahead of myself? (LOL ) This is just so exciting to me that I am able to play like this after years of not knowing how. Thank you SO MUCH for your simple, clear explanations, Lisa!
What is that outro song?! 😮 It's so good! I suddenly got so inspired to make music just like that, which is quite different to what I normally make. Do you have your own music on bandcamp or spotify etc?
Hi Lisa I know this is an old video but I'm just a beginner on the keyboard. I don't quite understand what chords are and the rules of it. Like why does the d cord have a an f sharp? I still don't understand which cords go together please help. Thank you so much ❤
Can somebody please explain to me from 2:36 on, I can understand moving in the key of C (because you just use the same finger patern, leaving a key between every note you press) but I do not get how do I know which chords to play after the D, I am lost there! Sorry for the stupid question, I am an absoulute piano beginner and have no musical education (obviously :-). Anyhow I love these videos from Pianote, thank you, Lisa, so much for them, you give me hope that I can actually learn some day! :-)
Hi Renata! Moving to a different starting notes means we are in a different key signature, so it's important to learn your key signatures. For example, the key of D major has two black notes in it (F# and C#). It has these notes because of the major scale formula - ruclips.net/video/zUTw_I5-x3k/видео.html
Hi ed, as Mick Hyde says, that was because we changed keys from C to D. The D scale has two black keys (sharps). We wanted to show people how this looks in a different key. I hope that helps! - Scott
"di" in "Diatonic" does not refer to "two" but the word comes from dia- (greek for "through") and -tonic: Meaning through the tone, notes coming only from one key (in this case of C major, only white keys). You got some strong guessing skills, never thought about that perspective though :)
@@EgeVeKlavye Yeah... that was what I had in mind too, _dia_ (as in diathermy , diaphanous, etc.) with the sense of Latin _per_ i.e. _through_ as you put it - I guess my phrasing wasn't good enough. Thanks for the elaboration, though!
I’ve become such a fan of this channel. Short, sweet, and so useful. Can’t so enough about Pianote!
This was great, I have been researching "what piano chords sound good together" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Nonason Ranincoln Genie - (do a search on google )?
It is a smashing one off product for discovering how to play the piano like a pro minus the hard work. Ive heard some super things about it and my buddy got cool results with it.
I totally agree ! It is addictive because the lessons are so unspiring and soooo usefull
I seriously want a piano because of this channel😬✌🏻
@@ohlordd-431 mee tOooooooooooooooo
I love the way Lisa Witt makes it easy for non musicians like me to learn to make music. Thank you Lisa!
i love how much of a blast youre having! inspires me to showcase my own personal enthusiasm when im posting on my own media platforms!
Lisa, Lisa! You are singlehandedly improving my understanding of chords by bounds - not just leaps. Love 💕 you. Thank you so much. I also can’t afford lessons - enter Lisa : ) So thankful!
Think you been on this program for while??
Her voice is so calming
EVERYTHING is here for our instruction: great material, great presentation, and GREAT enthusiasm.... for playing and for feeling good about doing so. I played these chords and was smiling all day. THANKS!!! Learn 1 key per week... that's a BIG pile of keys under your hand in one year!!!!!
You such an amazing teacher. I just learnt diatonic chords today. First time ever. I'm a fan. Thanks a million
I started playing piano as an adult for the first time on 10/2020. I have been playing about 2 to 3 hours a day since then and taking 1 lesson a week with an instructor.
As a beginner, I actually understand this!! I see the pattern and it makes perfect sense.
I can actually enjoy playing chords and it sounds really nice.
Thank you so much for this lesson. This is gold!!
This teacher is such a delight
Such a great teacher! There has not been one video of yours yet that I have not learned something and have loved every minute of it!
it makes so much sense!! you have a gift at explaining music!
Brilliant and insightful as always! Thanks for your honesty and hard work. Those diminished chords are always crazy, but a great way to snap attention back if you've been floating in major chords for a while.
Also a big fan of this channel and the passionate and enthusiastic way that you explain piano theory and show the pratical aspects of it. Many thanks
Only recently discovered your channel and am really enjoying it. Some very simple sounding but very useful things explained perfectly and with great suggestions for both practicing and using.
Oh wow! I was just trying to learn this for my first time last year. All this time I thought a Diatonic family was a group of 6 chords made up of 1-4-5 Major & associated Minors. (C Am | F Dm | G Em). Thanks for your insight. I can never get music theory straight in my head 🥴 Love your videos by the way!
I really like your style... Am turning 70 this year with 30s attitude while going on 100. Your enthusiasm and unique approach is great at renewing my faith - with hands and style catching up - remembering it all, after avoiding the 88 key approach for too many decades, keep it up!
It's nice using a portable midi controller with adequate key weight and choice of 4 awesome 9 foot grands [never need tuning either] at my finger tips - feeling spoiled happy after 2 decades since the Millennium!
Another keyboardist friend that was a piano tuner when we met 40 years back is still strictly 'old school' and lumbers around with his upright in tow - while I say why bother when you can simply carry the thing and load it in a car?
Love your energy and passion for teaching music. Also you eyes, face and voice. Yes, that a complement you you!
Lisa is always sweet and a fun teacher
Going to finally be buying my first MIDI keyboard very soon and this video has helped me immensely! This is going to be one of the first things I apply into the sounds I hear that will come when learning to play chords. To really hear what sounds good with what from the get go, and then learn all the different ways to mix and create music with them.
So exciting! :)
I'm in love with you, your teaching. I confess that I'm totally attracted to your teaching style... Thank you for making these videos.
@Pianote Long story short - My understanding of the music theory -> If a song is written in just one key (and i suppose most of them are written this way), and it is said "This song is in C Major", that means that ALL the notes (ALL OF THEM) played in that song need to be in The C Major scale (CDEFGAB). Am i right? If it includes other notes (like for example a D#), it means the most fundamental rules are broken and the person who composed that song was lacking some knowledge. Maybe there are songs which have this kind of mistakes, but they are mistakes and it would be nicer if they wouldn't be there. This is my understanding of the music theory, as a beginner. Am i right or did i misunderstood? Now comes the question. Cubase has a "Chord track" feature which helps you create chord progressions (it suggests the next chord based on the previous one). Now, if my first chord was C Major (and my song is supposedly a C Major song), why does Cubase suggest me D Major chord as one of the best choices for the second chord in my chord progression? D Major chord contains the note F#, which is NOT in the C Major scale. Isn't that a BIG and fundamental mistake? To make the things harder still, Cubase names D minor (a chord which has all its notes in the C Major scale, and, by my understanding, should fit closely into my chord progression, next to C Major chord) an unlikely match and puts it on a distant row, far away from my Initial C Major chord, to let me know that i should not use it. Do you see my puzzle? If you can see it, that means you also see where my understand of music theory stops working. Can you, please, put me back on track and help me understand what is happening? Thanks in advance!
Wow great question, thank you! Yes if a song is written in one key (which most are) then all the notes "should" be from that key.
However, music is art. It is not so strict that rules cannot be broken. So if a song in the key of C has a D# it's not necessarily a mistake and the composer is not lacking knowledge.
These notes that are outside the key are called "accidentals" and they can actually make the sound sound incredible! Listen to any jazz piano song and it will be full of them :)
So from a basic standpoint you are correct, but as with all things the more you learn about the rules the more you learn that they can all be broken haha
@@PianoteOfficial Thanks for always being kind and answering my questions! Have a wonderful day!
another reason why d major sounds good after c is because in the key of g major, c maj and d maj are the 4-5 which resolves nicely back to g major
My go to piano videos. You make it seem so simple, and are so reassuring. Thanks for all your videos.
This helped so much😁 if I am going to be honest when I saw 1, 5, 2 for chord progression I had no idea what it meant. I have been playing piano for 2 years now. This is gonna help me a lot with beat making!!! Thank you so much.
Yes, it may be short and sweet, but this video unlocks a lot if the principle is applied to every key signature. Thank you for doing this. So helpful.
I only today heard that chords can be out of scale, I searched google and found the term "diatonic chords" and had to search about it, and then I found this video, I'm watching because I already watch your videos
Mind-blown! That's REALLY accelerated my understanding of scales! Thank you so much.
Thanks so much for all the useful information, started playing seriously 3.5 years ago, now addicted.
Very good teacher gets right to the core of the issue
Thankyou so very much, all the videos are filling the gaps, thanks a lot.
Oh my gosh, thank you!!!😁😁😁😁💖💖💖 I have also played many years, and never heard this term til TODAY! And I've been searching for the proper term for over a year, now!😂😁 I've been calling it a chord cycle, for lack of knowledge of the proper term, I don't know how I had so many years of piano, orchestra, choir, etc, and no one ever bothered to teach THIS concept, or relative major/ minor keys, ugh! I picked up guitar last year, and I swear I've learned more about music on you tube than years of teachers ever gave me!😁💖
So cool! Happy you are here sharing with me and the Pianote community!! :)
God bless you...thank you for making it easy to learn piano...beginner here😊
thank you for sharing your knowledge
Loves pianote. It's really helpful :)
oh man, 30 seconds in and you're describing my whole musical dilemma. I had lessons as a kid but was never interested in learning theory, so I have a richer practical ability but a patchy understanding of theory and its hard to decipher what i already know and what I need to learn. Thank you for these videos and the way you explain concepts!
I may not be a pianist, but this helped me a lot in writing my woodwind quintet! Thanks for this great knowledge.
This is excellent. That means I can practice changing chords within the same scale.
The into hit right home. Playing piano since I am five, I am now 25 and no one has taught me about it!!
eveything in this channels i knew it by me ears before but now i get more knowledge
thank you dear
Every one of your videos is so helpful!
Your an awesome teacher!!!
You are so good at teaching ❤ keep it up i only played piano for a year and snappad this upp myself witout knowing its namn diaonic. I use one key a day :)
Your confession gives us “know nothings” hope; trust sister...
Thank you so much Lisa!
How was the lesson my dear?
Improving in piano melodies. with chords. with your help thank you very much 😘
..lovely instruction... thank you ever so much... for doing this.
All the VERY BEST
Amazing teacher!!
@Pianote ALways useful videos! Thanks! And the song in the last 20 seconds of the video sounds great! Does it have a name?
thank you.. your video help me alot,..
Ooo. Really enchanting 😇
I really like the way yu are explaining sound by terminology I fully understand - sad, happy, uplifting....major/minor/diminished does not tell me much:), thank you!
This was helpful. Thanks!
I absolutely LOVE YOU! I subscribe and I will follow you! It's so much clearer to me now! Thank you !
I love your way of expressions
This is what I've needed help with thank you so much
thank you for the video! i'm just starting out in music crafting, and this was very helpful
Thanks a lot for really worthy information
That was such an inspiring and uplifting video. Thank you!
I love this teacher 😘😘😘😘😘😘
Hey! This is the second video where u mention diatonic chords importance and I thank you so much for it cause that REALLY helped me and I don't really get why this is not the one first thing beginners learn when they come to learn chords.... This is all about piano!! Though if I may - and maybe it's a choice you've made - I'm surprised you never mention the cycle of fifth that is so helpful so as to learn all these chords and the logic of their progression! Thanks a lot anyway I've been following your classes for a week and omg I've improved my skills so much!!!!!!! Cheers!!
Thanks Guillaume!! We kept the Circle of 5ths out of this and the other video because we don't want to overwhelm new learners! We do have separate lessons on the Circle of 5ths. I'm so glad you're seeing an improvement!!! Keep it up!
amazing !! You make it so simple !
Thanks yo great teacher
Keep fallowing what rules, Lisa?
I love her tutorials
exactly what i needed
Much hlpful ,love from India 😃😃😃😃
Beautiful! thank you, Lisa
So glad I found your channel. Thanks for the content!
Thank You!
Nice explanation !
I noticed that I wasn't making any progress in my music theory course. I was sent to a a specialist at our local Music Conservatory who asked my my piano lessons history. i told him that I was having trouble identifying major and minor chords on Pianote.
He said that was a well known problem. No can be sad listening to even a minor chord if it's played by Lisa.
Great video thanks.
This is so helpful
Thank you!!!So useful!!🥰❤
Helpful and fun
ANOTHER GREAT VIDEO LISA ! THANKS FOR HELPING ME TO UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF DIATONIC CHORDS. I THOUGHT DIATONIC MEANT DIA = 2 AND TONIC MEANT TONES WHICH TRANSLATED IN MY SIMPLE LANGUAGE MEANS 2 TONE ( OR NOTE ) CHORDS ! ( LOL ! ). THANKS AGAIN LISA - I CAN NOW ENJOY CREATING MORE RELEVANT CHORDS IN MY SONGWRITING !
Thanks, before learning piano music feels almost supernatural, I can feel it but I can't explain it XD
How would that diatonic chord scale sound using most economical movement?
You help me alot mam thankyou soo much❤.
thanks a lot! another useful video =)
Thank you!!!! Excellent!!!
You say to "keep following the rules".. did I miss what the rules are? How do you find the diatonic chords in a given key...? I mean besides c. Is it possible to figure out the chords from another key?
Your playing is super duper good and I love your hair too❤️
So in picking out a melody of a pop song, should the chords in that key work best with it or are there other related chords I could use? I played the melody to “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” by Diana Ross and found that it was in E flat major. Some of the chords in the scale worked, but others sounded a little off. Are there other associated chords I could use or am I getting ahead of myself? (LOL ) This is just so exciting to me that I am able to play like this after years of not knowing how. Thank you SO MUCH for your simple, clear explanations, Lisa!
I like your videos a lot. Please keep posting. Really appreciate your efforts. Thousand likes.
What is that outro song?! 😮 It's so good! I suddenly got so inspired to make music just like that, which is quite different to what I normally make. Do you have your own music on bandcamp or spotify etc?
Hi Lisa I know this is an old video but I'm just a beginner on the keyboard. I don't quite understand what chords are and the rules of it. Like why does the d cord have a an f sharp? I still don't understand which cords go together please help. Thank you so much ❤
Does this also apply to minor, diminished, and augmented scales? Or only major?
It would apply to all scales, because its the scale tones that determine the chords!
Pianote thank you so much!
Sweet.I got a new tutor! 😊
Amazing video dear..
Great video very helpful 😊
How do you know whether to make it a major or minor chord. Like formation it works well with C scale but not others
wow.... thank you that helped me a lot in making better melodies good channel and nice videos :)
You are a genius
Thank you very much. That was so insightful.
Can somebody please explain to me from 2:36 on, I can understand moving in the key of C (because you just use the same finger patern, leaving a key between every note you press) but I do not get how do I know which chords to play after the D, I am lost there! Sorry for the stupid question, I am an absoulute piano beginner and have no musical education (obviously :-). Anyhow I love these videos from Pianote, thank you, Lisa, so much for them, you give me hope that I can actually learn some day! :-)
Hi Renata! Moving to a different starting notes means we are in a different key signature, so it's important to learn your key signatures. For example, the key of D major has two black notes in it (F# and C#). It has these notes because of the major scale formula - ruclips.net/video/zUTw_I5-x3k/видео.html
Don't worry will help you with that
So Profound.
thank you!
I didnt get that switch from playing only white keys to playing the black keys as well. Why was that?
Play only the keys in that particular scale. C scale has all white keys, D scale has white and sharps keys.
Hi ed, as Mick Hyde says, that was because we changed keys from C to D. The D scale has two black keys (sharps). We wanted to show people how this looks in a different key. I hope that helps! - Scott
I'm guessing the term _diatonic_ refers to the collection of the two tones - major ("happy") and minor ("sad") - within one key signature?...
"di" in "Diatonic" does not refer to "two" but the word comes from dia- (greek for "through") and -tonic: Meaning through the tone, notes coming only from one key (in this case of C major, only white keys). You got some strong guessing skills, never thought about that perspective though :)
@@EgeVeKlavye Yeah... that was what I had in mind too, _dia_ (as in diathermy , diaphanous, etc.) with the sense of Latin _per_ i.e. _through_ as you put it - I guess my phrasing wasn't good enough.
Thanks for the elaboration, though!
As a learner of the English language, diarrhea makes a whole lot more sense to me now
You is too cool for school! x