00:00 - Intro 01:16 - 2 Types of Sus Chords 02:42 - Technique 1: Minor Chords 05:52 - Technique 2: Major Chords 08:52 - Technique 3: Dominant Chords 12:24 - Using Sus Chords in a Progression 14:08 - Conclusion
Hi my friend i have to tell you that you that you are changing my life with these lessons my name is fabian cosster i am a proud member of piano with jonny i am coming from curacao what i like most is the slide and turns techniqie when i hear a piano improvisation on the radio i van figure out what is going on god bless you i feel very happy to be a member of pianowithjonny
For techniques 1 n 2 another way one can think of the the sus chords being applied is to add the sus2 chord of the relative minor/major chord Eg. for Dmin u play Fsus2 (Dmin n Fmaj are relative keys Same for Cmaj (u play Asus 2)
7:00 - just to clarify. The reason it is called a "CMaj13" chord and not "C13" is because of the major 7th (B natural). The 13th is A, but the major part in the name comes from the major 7th (B natural) and not the major 3rd (E natural). You can still have a C Major chord (C-E-G) with a 13th (A) in it, but if it has a Bb (or implies a dominant chord in some way), it would be C13, and not a CMaj13b7 or something wild like that. I think your explanation of why it's considered a 13 chord is spot-on, but I think you glossed over why it's a CMaj13 and not just C13 or even a Cadd6
yeah, this also works with triads, on dominant chords you can play a lot of triads to get certain sounds, major triad on 6 (13b9), triad on 2 (13#11), triad on #11 (13, #11, b9), triad on #5 (#5#9), triad on #9 (#9) and if your jacob collier you can also play a triad on the 3 (#5, add maj7) that about all the major chords I can think of for dominant chords.
As a self taught musician, I like to believe I’ve made it a whole lot down the road by myself. Then I realize the amount of help I’ve gotten from these guys that have been at for years. This is one of those that made a difference to me; before watching it, I felt stuck and like I was missing a piece of the puzzle. Thanks!
2:51 To those watching: This is not a Csus2 chord. It's Cm9. The difference being Jonny's *added* the 2 (or 9 in this case) as well as the 7. These chords sound completely different, which is why chord extensions are so important.
I am really confused. At 3:48 he plays a CmSus2 yeah - but with an F - surely that is the Sus 4th as he has added the F, one step down from the G ? He even goes on to say that it is the B flat sus 4 ? Maybe I need to watch the end....confused.
Great video. I'm a pianist and a composer and while I know these chords, I've never seen them constructed as sus variants over a base chord. Nice job and what a great way to systemize the "jazzification" of a standard, baroquesque chord progression!
Jonny, you're a really good professor and your classes are really well presented. I'm learning the guitar and knowing exactly how you're playing those chords is IMMENSELY helpful in transposing from piano to guitar. Thanks a lot 💖💖
I mainly play poorly to produce music, go in and tweak the midi after to sound right, cuz so many channels presented lessons that didn’t help technique and theory in a way that resonated with me. Your channel has helped tons. Looking forward to trying out writing using these chords
Wow, what a clear explanation. You certainly opened some 'doors'. Need to get this under my fingers and keep exploring further. Thanks for the free lesson.
this is a really good video thanks! what I learned to do is flip the minor 7th on the sus2 minor chord in the right hand down one octave and you have a nice bluesy jazz sound. So like the Bflat in this case if you are ding a Cminor 7th in the right hand i lower the Bflat down one octave but still play that chord in the right hand and the left hand does a blues thing.
Beautiful and interesting! What I would like to know is there a lesson on how to travel from one chord to the next, like infusing melody (or not) so you have continuous music. Do you know what I mean, Jonny?
13:01 First off, this is a nice chord progression! A classic I IV iii vi ii V I. And I like the way you use quartal voicings in your examples. But from a compositional standpoint that last G7 (#9 b13) doesn't sit right with me, seeing as we've just heard that same chord in the previous bar. I'd maybe swap it out for a tritone sub, like C#7(13 #11). Would that work? I'm going purely by ear here btw, it's 2 AM here and my kid is asleep in the next room. Or you could do a back door 2 5 1 maybe? a dominant chord from the b7?
To be strict about the names, the chords should be named like this. The video is truly helpful tbh :) Sus layering technique: Note: fifth can be omitted for voicing m7sus: - Play sus2 on minor third - Play sus4 on dominant seventh maj7add6 or maj7add13: - Play sus2 on sixth - Play sus4 on third dominant seventh (#5, #9): - Play sus2 on b6th - Play sus4 on b3rd
I play slash chords frequently, most often I/vi without any sus stuff. But this is give some nice stuff to try out as well. Definately will implement it in my playing. Cheers
You're great dear Johny. Thanks for sharing your talent. It's amazing how with a little variation you can make it easy to play the piano. Thanks for that. Yo
I was always like what in the heck is that sharp 9 flat thirteen chords in Stevies songs. now I now its stacked suspended chords. Thanks now I can flex when I play
This is exciting. I'm only three minutes in so far, but this explains a lot of the sounds I love. One example that has been stuck in my head for over fifty years is Joni Mitchell's song "The Arrangement."
I’m new and I’m un a free trial right now and I’m already loving your website and everything it has to offer and was thinking of getting a membership. Will we get an email about the 50% off?
I thought the sus meant that the true nature of the chord (whether it's major or minor) was not revealed, hence suspended. Which of course doesn't apply if you play e.g. your Cm11.
I am racking my brain trying to figure out what the artist McBaise is doing on his album Tubes with his chords. And I’m no expert but this seems like something he’s using. Idk. You should check him out and do a video on him because his chord progressions are divine.
I confess to seeing and participating in too much Among Us content lately so I keep interpreting the phrase "sus chords" differently. Most trendy people probably ran into this issue 3 years ago, I'm just catching up
00:00 - Intro
01:16 - 2 Types of Sus Chords
02:42 - Technique 1: Minor Chords
05:52 - Technique 2: Major Chords
08:52 - Technique 3: Dominant Chords
12:24 - Using Sus Chords in a Progression
14:08 - Conclusion
Hi my friend i have to tell you that you that you are changing my life with these lessons my name is fabian cosster i am a proud member of piano with jonny i am coming from curacao what i like most is the slide and turns techniqie when i hear a piano improvisation on the radio i van figure out what is going on god bless you i feel very happy to be a member of pianowithjonny
Fabian, does your native language doesn't have punctuation too?
@@NeZversSounds, does your native language not have proper grammar?
@@NeZversSounds bro this is embarrassing, you made a 2nd grade grammatical mistake in a reply shitting on someone’s language 😭😭😭
@@NeZversSounds might want to polish up that grammar before commenting about grammar next time ;)
@@NeZversSounds Does your native language make you an awful person?
For techniques 1 n 2 another way one can think of the the sus chords being applied is to add the sus2 chord of the relative minor/major chord
Eg. for Dmin u play Fsus2 (Dmin n Fmaj are relative keys
Same for Cmaj (u play Asus 2)
Man I love your energy 😍 you’re the most enthusiastic piano teacher on RUclips!
My piano coach and I mention PWJ every week!
I don't know if you're aware of the impact your lessons have on so many people.
These are life-changing bits you constantly share. 💯🔥
7:00 - just to clarify. The reason it is called a "CMaj13" chord and not "C13" is because of the major 7th (B natural). The 13th is A, but the major part in the name comes from the major 7th (B natural) and not the major 3rd (E natural). You can still have a C Major chord (C-E-G) with a 13th (A) in it, but if it has a Bb (or implies a dominant chord in some way), it would be C13, and not a CMaj13b7 or something wild like that.
I think your explanation of why it's considered a 13 chord is spot-on, but I think you glossed over why it's a CMaj13 and not just C13 or even a Cadd6
Woah, I've never though about looking at the top part of extended chords as sus chords on their own, this is very useful information! Thanks!
yeah, this also works with triads, on dominant chords you can play a lot of triads to get certain sounds, major triad on 6 (13b9), triad on 2 (13#11), triad on #11 (13, #11, b9), triad on #5 (#5#9), triad on #9 (#9) and if your jacob collier you can also play a triad on the 3 (#5, add maj7) that about all the major chords I can think of for dominant chords.
@@henkdevries2002 Awesome reply, real gem.
You'd be a good teacher!
I have seen a lot of jazz videos and this is the greatest one! Incredible how quite complicated math is made as simple as You did!
Sounds so good! You enjoy to teach. It’s visible. You’re an amazing teacher.❤thanks.
Thank you!
As a guitar and bass player who this was an awesome lesson Johnny! Keep up the good work!
As a self taught musician, I like to believe I’ve made it a whole lot down the road by myself. Then I realize the amount of help I’ve gotten from these guys that have been at for years. This is one of those that made a difference to me; before watching it, I felt stuck and like I was missing a piece of the puzzle. Thanks!
Learn your theory back and forth. Then all of this is easy to understand. It doesn't take much to learn.
2:51 To those watching: This is not a Csus2 chord. It's Cm9. The difference being Jonny's *added* the 2 (or 9 in this case) as well as the 7. These chords sound completely different, which is why chord extensions are so important.
I am really confused. At 3:48 he plays a CmSus2 yeah - but with an F - surely that is the Sus 4th as he has added the F, one step down from the G ?
He even goes on to say that it is the B flat sus 4 ?
Maybe I need to watch the end....confused.
Right, so he is adding a separate chord altogether rather than altering it - got it.
Its Cm11, that F is the 11
@@wh0racle3 And the D is the 9th. Cm9 with Sus 4
So in the right hand its a D minor #5 b9 omit 7 or an Ebsus2 with the major 7 at the bottom 🤪
10/10 video, sus chords are really pretty
Great video. I'm a pianist and a composer and while I know these chords, I've never seen them constructed as sus variants over a base chord. Nice job and what a great way to systemize the "jazzification" of a standard, baroquesque chord progression!
Thank you so much for giving this free lesson! God bless you and your music sir! I hope God fills you with wonderful more music!
Jonny, you're a really good professor and your classes are really well presented. I'm learning the guitar and knowing exactly how you're playing those chords is IMMENSELY helpful in transposing from piano to guitar. Thanks a lot 💖💖
I don´t have words to describes how this lesson changeg my mind!
Thank you for share these fantastic tricks! Best regards from Brazil
I mainly play poorly to produce music, go in and tweak the midi after to sound right, cuz so many channels presented lessons that didn’t help technique and theory in a way that resonated with me. Your channel has helped tons. Looking forward to trying out writing using these chords
and it was dope. helped make that jazzy sound i was after
Those chords are gorgeous! Thanks so much for the great video. I will be using this a lot!
Wow, what a clear explanation. You certainly opened some 'doors'. Need to get this under my fingers and keep exploring further. Thanks for the free lesson.
Wow!! Talk about a “light bulb moment”! Thank you for this!
All these for free !!my bro ......God bless you
Great tutorial. This is a great way to get outside the box, and use new voicings!
Beautiful sonic imagery. You paint murals with your music.
This is great- it's an easier way to remember how to play these voicings.
Oh man! when you played that initial sequence in Sus4 chords, that was bloody brilliant!
Way Cool Johnny! Thanks! That was a HUGH help for me….
this is a really good video thanks! what I learned to do is flip the minor 7th on the sus2 minor chord in the right hand down one octave and you have a nice bluesy jazz sound. So like the Bflat in this case if you are ding a Cminor 7th in the right hand i lower the Bflat down one octave but still play that chord in the right hand and the left hand does a blues thing.
Wow, that was such a great explanation. I must get my keyboard working, I'm not on top of MIDI yet.
Beautiful and interesting! What I would like to know is there a lesson on how to travel from one chord to the next, like infusing melody (or not) so you have continuous music. Do you know what I mean, Jonny?
You have to develop your hearing. But I would listen first for Bass and go from there.
13:01 First off, this is a nice chord progression! A classic I IV iii vi ii V I. And I like the way you use quartal voicings in your examples.
But from a compositional standpoint that last G7 (#9 b13) doesn't sit right with me, seeing as we've just heard that same chord in the previous bar. I'd maybe swap it out for a tritone sub, like C#7(13 #11). Would that work? I'm going purely by ear here btw, it's 2 AM here and my kid is asleep in the next room. Or you could do a back door 2 5 1 maybe? a dominant chord from the b7?
Yeah the progressions were by far the weakest part of the vid. Pedestrian at best if not just annoying :) Excellent teaching explanation though!
Wow. Thanks changing the way I sound.
Thank you, Jonny🌹🌹🌹🌹
To be strict about the names, the chords should be named like this. The video is truly helpful tbh :)
Sus layering technique:
Note: fifth can be omitted for voicing
m7sus:
- Play sus2 on minor third
- Play sus4 on dominant seventh
maj7add6 or maj7add13:
- Play sus2 on sixth
- Play sus4 on third
dominant seventh (#5, #9):
- Play sus2 on b6th
- Play sus4 on b3rd
Absolute wonderful lesson. Please don't stop I'm so happy with this type of information especially from an interval listening perspective.
شكرا جونى
Even for a guitar player, like me, these are incredibly useful. Just watching this video has given me a few new ideas that I want to play with.
Great lesson Johnny! I've been working with it now for about a week. And I will keep practicing. It's so incredibly helpful.
Have a great day! ❤
I need more like this 😍
I play slash chords frequently, most often I/vi without any sus stuff. But this is give some nice stuff to try out as well. Definately will implement it in my playing. Cheers
For Major chords would it be fair to say that you're playing a sus 2 of the relative minor over the major chord?
Exactly. Same for the minor chords, you can say you play the sus 2 of their relative major
yes fair.
How does he manage to not laugh when saying Sus
I can't stop laughing 🤣🤣 some of us get it some don't. Let us enjoy it while it's not flooded with people like us.
Great pacing you’re a fab teacher thank you
Wow, I am a guitar player, and subscribed because of the content of this video. This isn't just for piano. Dig it.
You're great dear Johny. Thanks for sharing your talent. It's amazing how with a little variation you can make it easy to play the piano. Thanks for that. Yo
Enjoying this guy's energy and enthusiasm. The kind of guy you'd love to have a beer with. Liked and subbed.
Love these techniques. Really gives you that Neo Soul vibe. Great video, my friend!
LOVE THIS!! I don't play piano, but this is applying nicely to my guitar as well. Great idea!! Thx
flamboyant but very good info
I was always like what in the heck is that sharp 9 flat thirteen chords in Stevies songs. now I now its stacked suspended chords. Thanks now I can flex when I play
Just Loved your idea
This is exciting. I'm only three minutes in so far, but this explains a lot of the sounds I love. One example that has been stuck in my head for over fifty years is Joni Mitchell's song "The Arrangement."
Just great, thanks man!
Love it. So useful. Are the inversions necessary? I guess it’s taste. I’’ll have to return a lot go this video. Thanks.
These sus 2 chords sound amazing
Such a simple and easy way to understand upper extensions, and get them locked in. Muchly appreciated Jonny. Off to use them in some standards now.
great lesson! 🙏
Thank you so much !!!!
Great ideas, thank you for sharing. I find it difficult to block sound out so the backing music makes listening to your words harder.
Wow, this is awesome!!! I want to try this in one of my songs. I'm always trying to experiment.
Excellent!
Great stuff, thx!
Amazing stuff. Thanks for sharing.
One of the Best keyboardist in d world..my.jonny
3:03 Boards of Canada - A Beautiful Place out in the Country
Sooo useful. Thanks! I'll be using these chords in my next compositions for sure!
Since tomorrow is the 6th, I'll try it. I'm still a little sus though.
great sound. gonna practice this one! thank you jonny
Magic!
Great trick! Thank you!
Love the video!
You are amazing !
This was really useful!
Thank you!
Wow, I love this lesson...Thank You!
Very nice thanks
Cool,jonny,this is good stuff,now I know what a “sus”,chord is,been using em for years,but didn’t know the name,lol,thx jonny.
Love this!
great sound
good one,must try it.thanx
Awesome! 🙂
I'm a guitar player and I like learning about these chords
Thank you Sir 🙏🏽
I dont understand everything but I just copy this! And it sounds great so thank you!
Whoa man, you're a great teacher!
Thanks, nice video! A good example for these chords can be Steve Winwood's "Back In The High Life Again" ;) All the best...
Great video- this really helps a lot- would the sus chords be considered upper structure triads? They really sound great 😊
This is gold !!
The first trick reminded me of a piano track from FFX.
Have used the minor one long ago. The other two are new to me.
You rock Mr May
Amazing 😍
I’m new and I’m un a free trial right now and I’m already loving your website and everything it has to offer and was thinking of getting a membership. Will we get an email about the 50% off?
Good stuff
This video is S U S
I can't watch this video among ruined me
I thought the sus meant that the true nature of the chord (whether it's major or minor) was not revealed, hence suspended. Which of course doesn't apply if you play e.g. your Cm11.
I am racking my brain trying to figure out what the artist McBaise is doing on his album Tubes with his chords. And I’m no expert but this seems like something he’s using. Idk. You should check him out and do a video on him because his chord progressions are divine.
Great performance
I confess to seeing and participating in too much Among Us content lately so I keep interpreting the phrase "sus chords" differently. Most trendy people probably ran into this issue 3 years ago, I'm just catching up
amogus hit in late 2020 lasted until mid 2021. you’re not too late
This is cool..thanks..
So another trick would be to play the root and b3 with quartals on the 4th.