Thank you so much for your kind words! 🙏 I’m glad to hear that you found the breakdown helpful and clear. Your support means a lot to me, and it motivates me to keep creating more content. Stay tuned for more tutorials and tips! 🎹🎶
Thank you, Mr. Chris. This is a great lesson. A lot of time as we are trying to learn these things, spending so much time trying to figure out how this or that is done this lesson is one of such things for me, however I did get lost as to why we used the DAbB early on in that key of CMj. I will go back to it. Overall again great lesson. 👍
Hi there, Kathy! You're most certainly welcome and thank you! This is another reason why I tell my students to not focus so much on the key they happen to be playing in. If a song is in the "key of..." it doesn't mean that the musicians are glued to the notes that are exclusive to whatever key they happen to be playing in (aka diatonic notes). There are many, many scales that have, for example, C as the first note of the scale as well as a C major chord as the first chord of the scale just like C major would. However that's where the similarities end and it gives the musical tons of harmonic options. There are tons of scales that exist but I try to focus on the ones that are most common in gospel music.
THANK YOU SO MUCH, MAN! I love how you broke EVERYTHING down and made it crystal clear! Keep it up!
Thank you so much for your kind words! 🙏 I’m glad to hear that you found the breakdown helpful and clear. Your support means a lot to me, and it motivates me to keep creating more content. Stay tuned for more tutorials and tips! 🎹🎶
Many thanks bro❤
You’re welcome!
Thank you, Mr. Chris. This is a great lesson. A lot of time as we are trying to learn these things, spending so much time trying to figure out how this or that is done this lesson is one of such things for me, however I did get lost as to why we used the DAbB early on in that key of CMj. I will go back to it. Overall again great lesson. 👍
Hi there, Kathy! You're most certainly welcome and thank you! This is another reason why I tell my students to not focus so much on the key they happen to be playing in. If a song is in the "key of..." it doesn't mean that the musicians are glued to the notes that are exclusive to whatever key they happen to be playing in (aka diatonic notes).
There are many, many scales that have, for example, C as the first note of the scale as well as a C major chord as the first chord of the scale just like C major would. However that's where the similarities end and it gives the musical tons of harmonic options.
There are tons of scales that exist but I try to focus on the ones that are most common in gospel music.