Hi Anders! I'm not sure if I understand you correctly, but here is a link to the sheet music for the bridge if that helps: drive.google.com/file/d/1uNx6bS1LoyZdiPe7DKOLvZ3mn03T_sp7/view?usp=drive_link
I’m barely able to read music but have a question: Why does he refer to the first chord as C flat Maj9 when the sheet music clearly says C flat Ma7? Sorry for the newbie question but I’m a little confused.
Hi Andrew, good question. In certain styles, you're free to add extensions to seventh chords, so the Cbma7 chord symbols implies that you can add a 9th if it's stylistically appropriate, which it is in this case. When I said Cbma9 I was just a little more specific as to the exact voicing they're playing. But you're right, I should have been consistent - it would be clearer if the chord symbol said Cbma9...
@@christianklikovitsExcellent, thanks so much for the quick reply, Christian. That clears it up for me! It’s been decades since I played seriously so I’m still knocking off the rust. Otherwise, thanks for an excellent tutorial!
Man, anyone who wants to talk about musical knowledge as gatekeeping need look no further than piano players/teachers. 😂 It’s super cool that you are so skilled at playing piano that you can transpose this song into chords that you think are correct. But dang dude… this is all coming across as overly confident, and not necessarily the secret to playing certain songs. The secret to playing songs on any given instrument is putting in the hours of training it takes.
What does your post even mean? The song is made up of a bunch of jazz chords, and he gives the chords and a bass line you can play under the chords to sound like the recording. Then he's trying to explain that the parts in the song are variations on each other, so you can simplify a song that seems more complicated than it is. How is that being a gatekeeper? If you can't play jazz chords over a pretty basic bass part in the left hand you're not ready for this song--it's not his fault.
@@Blendercagelol yeah man, that’s the point. My middle school band teacher was the first person (and not the last) to tell me that there is no secret to being a competent musician, it just requires hours of practice. You heard the 10,000 hours thing, ya? So you’re not gonna be able to just listen to a song and play it like this dude unless you put in the time to master your instrument. To say otherwise is misleading, in my opinion.
@@Tzadeck Sorry, but I take issue with professional musicians that say things like “the secret to playing any song”… or “every song uses these four chords!” Not only are they usually diminishing/disrespecting the musicians whose song they are transposing, but often they only show you one instrument’s part (usually piano) without the context of the rest of the band. Jamiraqui usually has at least two guitar tracks and an additional synth on top of their piano chords- so my long winded point is that what this guy is telling us very confidently is a “B7 minor” probably isn’t that in the context of the song. And as I said to the other guy, obviously this dude is a very skilled musician who has put in the hours to master his instrument. I don’t think it’s fair to be like “anyone can learn this song if you do this”, because we don’t know anyone/everyone’s skill level. It’s a tiny, dumb point, but it just ruffled my feathers. Also I was drunk. lol my bad 😂❤
Straight forward and clear. No filler. Love it!
Thank you, I appreciate that!
Best tutorial for this song, thank you
Thank you, I appreciate that!
Awesome tutorial. Going to learn this tonight.
🙏
amazing video very kind of you to share thanks!
Thank you, Ali, I appreciate that 🙏
Wow thanks!! I will wait my approval to get the sheet music.
Greetings from MEX
Very cool. Figured it out on guitar in the past, but never on the piano, very helpful, thanks!
Thank you, Jimmy, I appreciate that!
Great video! Thanks for sharing and keeping it really short and sweet and to the point!
Thank you Craig, I appreciate that!
Great video thanks
The complete version 👏👏👏
Hi Anders! I'm not sure if I understand you correctly, but here is a link to the sheet music for the bridge if that helps: drive.google.com/file/d/1uNx6bS1LoyZdiPe7DKOLvZ3mn03T_sp7/view?usp=drive_link
I was merely praising you for the thoroughness of your tutorial 😁.
Well, in that case - much appreciated, thank you 🙏
Hi Christian. Very good video. I can't access the sheet music for this video. Can you help me?
Hi there! I approved the share, you should be able to access it now 🙂
@@christianklikovits Super! Thank you very much!!!!
I like you @Christian Klikovits, thanks for Sharing!
Thank you, I appreciate that 🙏
Hi this is an awesome tutorial!! But I tried to open the drive and it doesn't open. Help :(
I think there's a 'request access' button...
I’m barely able to read music but have a question: Why does he refer to the first chord as C flat Maj9 when the sheet music clearly says C flat Ma7?
Sorry for the newbie question but I’m a little confused.
Hi Andrew, good question. In certain styles, you're free to add extensions to seventh chords, so the Cbma7 chord symbols implies that you can add a 9th if it's stylistically appropriate, which it is in this case. When I said Cbma9 I was just a little more specific as to the exact voicing they're playing. But you're right, I should have been consistent - it would be clearer if the chord symbol said Cbma9...
@@christianklikovitsExcellent, thanks so much for the quick reply, Christian. That clears it up for me!
It’s been decades since I played seriously so I’m still knocking off the rust. Otherwise, thanks for an excellent tutorial!
@@andrewklein5441 👍
Man, anyone who wants to talk about musical knowledge as gatekeeping need look no further than piano players/teachers. 😂
It’s super cool that you are so skilled at playing piano that you can transpose this song into chords that you think are correct. But dang dude… this is all coming across as overly confident, and not necessarily the secret to playing certain songs.
The secret to playing songs on any given instrument is putting in the hours of training it takes.
That’s not a secret
What does your post even mean?
The song is made up of a bunch of jazz chords, and he gives the chords and a bass line you can play under the chords to sound like the recording. Then he's trying to explain that the parts in the song are variations on each other, so you can simplify a song that seems more complicated than it is. How is that being a gatekeeper?
If you can't play jazz chords over a pretty basic bass part in the left hand you're not ready for this song--it's not his fault.
@@Blendercagelol yeah man, that’s the point. My middle school band teacher was the first person (and not the last) to tell me that there is no secret to being a competent musician, it just requires hours of practice. You heard the 10,000 hours thing, ya? So you’re not gonna be able to just listen to a song and play it like this dude unless you put in the time to master your instrument. To say otherwise is misleading, in my opinion.
@@Tzadeck Sorry, but I take issue with professional musicians that say things like “the secret to playing any song”… or “every song uses these four chords!” Not only are they usually diminishing/disrespecting the musicians whose song they are transposing, but often they only show you one instrument’s part (usually piano) without the context of the rest of the band. Jamiraqui usually has at least two guitar tracks and an additional synth on top of their piano chords- so my long winded point is that what this guy is telling us very confidently is a “B7 minor” probably isn’t that in the context of the song.
And as I said to the other guy, obviously this dude is a very skilled musician who has put in the hours to master his instrument. I don’t think it’s fair to be like “anyone can learn this song if you do this”, because we don’t know anyone/everyone’s skill level. It’s a tiny, dumb point, but it just ruffled my feathers.
Also I was drunk. lol my bad 😂❤