Same here! I hear alot of The Beatles songbook in a lot of these changes and that's pretty much where my guitar playing started was a Beatles songbook. It is good to have concise knowledge behind why the changes work like they do, it's definitely helped me. I think before I would just play and listen and hope for what might seem like a mistake and explore it further but now it's more intentional. Thank you for this lesson, fantastic!
At 11:37, one small wrinkle that's worth pointing out for folks who are new to this concept. A nondiatonic dominant 7th chord is only a secondary dominant if it *functions* like a dominant - i.e., resolves to a chord with a tonic function relative to the secondary dominant - so you have to look at context. Nine times out of ten, a secondary dominant will resolve a 5th down. Here, that would be to Emin, because Emin is the chord in G maj off of which B7 is built. However, in minor *and* major keys, the chords built off of the third and sixth degrees have a tonic function as well. Cmaj is built off of the sixth degree of Emin, so it functions as a tonic within Cmaj. So yes, this is a secondary dominant, but I wanted to give a little more explanation since it looks quite different than the examples given earlier in the video.
Just got back up from my shed having stuck a 2 minute bassline onto my looper and spent over an hour borrowing chords to see what emotions they suggest. Thanks for some great ideas to add into the mix, and for confirming that I'm not wasting my time! Plan A - Lunch, jug of coffee, loop-di-loop...
The song 2 chord technique always fascinates me...making the notes sound like detuned i have used it like playing the A and D note same time makes it sound lower than both
Great video Paul, thank you as always. And for anyone who's on the fence over the next level playing course, its the best intermediate guitar course out there!! I'm on module 2 currently and loving every single lesson
Thanks man i’m trying to be the best as possible at guitar. I’m 15 and I want to be the best in my school you help so much. Thank you subscribing to you a few months back was the best choice.
There’s a book called “becoming talented” on ear training and reading, if you’ve got the ambition and the motivation, it’s super important to you find the best way to use that energy; That book would be the one I wish I had been shown earlier. It will improve your musicality a great deal and make it a lot easier in the long run!
People often use the major V because they want to still use a perfect cadence in minor. That’s why we have the harmonic minor scale. That’s my understanding anyway.
I’ve been doing this for years without knowing what I was doing. Awesome!
Same here! I hear alot of The Beatles songbook in a lot of these changes and that's pretty much where my guitar playing started was a Beatles songbook. It is good to have concise knowledge behind why the changes work like they do, it's definitely helped me. I think before I would just play and listen and hope for what might seem like a mistake and explore it further but now it's more intentional.
Thank you for this lesson, fantastic!
At 11:37, one small wrinkle that's worth pointing out for folks who are new to this concept. A nondiatonic dominant 7th chord is only a secondary dominant if it *functions* like a dominant - i.e., resolves to a chord with a tonic function relative to the secondary dominant - so you have to look at context. Nine times out of ten, a secondary dominant will resolve a 5th down. Here, that would be to Emin, because Emin is the chord in G maj off of which B7 is built. However, in minor *and* major keys, the chords built off of the third and sixth degrees have a tonic function as well. Cmaj is built off of the sixth degree of Emin, so it functions as a tonic within Cmaj. So yes, this is a secondary dominant, but I wanted to give a little more explanation since it looks quite different than the examples given earlier in the video.
Just got back up from my shed having stuck a 2 minute bassline onto my looper and spent over an hour borrowing chords to see what emotions they suggest. Thanks for some great ideas to add into the mix, and for confirming that I'm not wasting my time! Plan A - Lunch, jug of coffee, loop-di-loop...
Rotem is one of my favorite guitar players on RUclips. He’s really good at explaining stuff, too!
yes i like it when pauly plays the acoustic guitar so calming
Great work guys! I love how Rotem starts to play "Shape of my heart" at 0:18 and smiles at Paul like: I know how to play it right too :)
Loved this one, do more videos like this please! You explain stuff so clearly
Another great video
Your ear naturally leads you there, but with knowing why.
Wow….2 of my fave guitarists together!
My favorite colab💯
1:20 in and my mind was officially blown.
The song 2 chord technique always fascinates me...making the notes sound like detuned i have used it like playing the A and D note same time makes it sound lower than both
Great video Paul, thank you as always. And for anyone who's on the fence over the next level playing course, its the best intermediate guitar course out there!! I'm on module 2 currently and loving every single lesson
PLEASE tell me the edit at 5:46 is Paul doing Rotem's accent
Excellent. Thanks!
Really good, Paul!
Beautiful stuff ❤
Thanks man i’m trying to be the best as possible at guitar. I’m 15 and I want to be the best in my school you help so much.
Thank you subscribing to you a few months back was the best choice.
There’s a book called “becoming talented” on ear training and reading, if you’ve got the ambition and the motivation, it’s super important to you find the best way to use that energy;
That book would be the one I wish I had been shown earlier. It will improve your musicality a great deal and make it a lot easier in the long run!
This is such a good one!
Great tips thanks Guys
Hi Paul, love the work.
Do you have to give the chord back at the end of the song?
If I don't, will I be liable in civil court?
Thanks for these. Great video!
Nice loved this
Great Video....As always
I wish I knew what guitar Paul is playing! It's so beautiful. Is that a Martin?
Check description my friend 🙏
I've always thought of extended chords as the 'expensive' chords 😂
Who are these guys they are the bomb they're great
👍🎵👍🎵both of you
I'm confused, wouldn't the V chord of Am be an Em instead of an E7?
People often use the major V because they want to still use a perfect cadence in minor. That’s why we have the harmonic minor scale. That’s my understanding anyway.
You can definitely find more detailed information online so take a look.
At 10:26 he's playing daniel cesear best part or not? With the borrowed chords
Ooh ooh ah ah
Are these guys big or are their guitars small?
Both
😂@@PaulDavids
Wow, Rotem doesn't look old enough to be your dad.
I was scared the whooole time that wonderwall will pop up
We do a lot of this stuff and dont really know what we are doing I think, Well I DO and DONT anyway. Dont want to speak for everyone.
It's a crime to be this early
Interesting playing fingerstyle on a steel string and picking on a classical nylon string. 😂
Extensions!? Algebra😢
שותף שלנו איזה ייצוג
man looks like hes in love
First 🤙
but seriously great video
The video is 12 mins long you commented the moment it was posted. And now u say it's a great video are u a time traveler man?
למה הפסקת לדבר על שלום? היינו מעריכים אם היית מביע התנגדות לרצח העם בעזה.
🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱
Let's make some lovely things 😍