Thank you very much Katie! I've been playing uke, harmonica and guitar using the good 'ol 1-4-5 method for years and always wonder where the method came from. I have no formal training in music. You have succeeded in teaching an old dog new tricks! Be well, and thanks again!
That’s an excellent question. If you want to change the key of a song in a minor key, you would use the same chart; however, you would use the vi chord (relative minor chord) as your guide to find the relative major and transpose like I showed you in the video. For example, if you have a song in Bm, your relative major key is D major. If you have a song in Am, the relative major is C major. You can also use the chromatic scale and move up or down using the beginning note of your minor chord, find the vi chord on the chart and move the key. I hope that helps 😀.
THANK YOU !!!!
Thanks, Katie! This is priceless! God bless! ❤
So glad this helped 😀. Thanks for watching.
Thanks Miss Katie .You are the best music teacher I have ever had!Love you!
You’re so sweet! I appreciate you so much, and I’m so grateful for the support you’ve shown me over the years ❤️.
Thank you very much Katie! I've been playing uke, harmonica and guitar using the good 'ol 1-4-5 method for years and always wonder where the method came from. I have no formal training in music. You have succeeded in teaching an old dog new tricks! Be well, and thanks again!
That's so awesome! I'm so glad you found this helpful! 😊
Hi katie its melanie Happy new year
Happy Mew Year, Mel!
Thanks for your major key tutorial. What about minor keys?
That’s an excellent question. If you want to change the key of a song in a minor key, you would use the same chart; however, you would use the vi chord (relative minor chord) as your guide to find the relative major and transpose like I showed you in the video. For example, if you have a song in Bm, your relative major key is D major. If you have a song in Am, the relative major is C major. You can also use the chromatic scale and move up or down using the beginning note of your minor chord, find the vi chord on the chart and move the key. I hope that helps 😀.
First comment!😊
Congrats on being first to comment! Thanks for being here :).
@@OneMusicSchool Yeah, always!❤️
😀😀😀😀