I hope everyone is well! Hey you know what! If you like this mini lesson, I have some ideas so I hit that like button so I'll continue to create ;-) thank you
@@carylchapman9952 thank you so much, Caryl ! I'm going to add in additional warm-ups with this format. Trying to keep things easier for me as Bob is no longer editing ;-)
Hi there no problem :-) about seven seconds in the video, I mentioned at 6/8 time. I also have the chords written above with the time signature. I hope that helps.. This is a general application, but C Major D minor and G major chords, are used and billions of songs! This is just lesson one, so I'll revisit your thoughts and lesson two. Happy playing. BTW, what kind of music do you like?
How would you explain to a beginner the difference between scales and chord progression? From a newby perspective - chords are keys played together, and scales - keys played sequentially, yet here we play keys sequentially but call it chords progression :) Thanks for the answer and for the teaching lessons you make available here!
@@grassrootspiano Thanks, so technically chord progression broken is not a chord progression and has no own term/name. It is just your video description confused me 'Practice chord progressions' - I watched the video and said - this is not a chord progression as to how I understand it :). I am practising scales and finger dexterity exercises and haven't touched chords yet.
@@grassrootspiano I read a bit more on chord progressions and I am talking here as a beginner :) It turns out you can play a chord harmonic (all keys together) or ascending/descending - keys in sequence. In this case for example playing V-I can be playing G-B-D together and after C-E-G together - chord progression. But if you play sequentially G-B-D-C-E-G it will also be called a chord progression played ASC. Right? What I do not understand is why playing sequentially G-B-D-C-E-G is called a chord progression but playing for example sequentially C-D-E-F-G-A-B-C is called a scale :)
I hope everyone is well! Hey you know what! If you like this mini lesson, I have some ideas so I hit that like button so I'll continue to create ;-) thank you
Oh thank you!!!! Was just talking about the 6/8 timing today. Very helpful and will be sure to practice. 😊🎶💯🎹🎵
@@carylchapman9952 thank you so much, Caryl ! I'm going to add in additional warm-ups with this format. Trying to keep things easier for me as Bob is no longer editing ;-)
Excellent but remains the application in a song.The time signature is obvious.❤❤❤
Hi there no problem :-) about seven seconds in the video, I mentioned at 6/8 time. I also have the chords written above with the time signature. I hope that helps..
This is a general application, but C Major D minor and G major chords, are used and billions of songs!
This is just lesson one, so I'll revisit your thoughts and lesson two. Happy playing. BTW, what kind of music do you like?
How would you explain to a beginner the difference between scales and chord progression? From a newby perspective - chords are keys played together, and scales - keys played sequentially, yet here we play keys sequentially but call it chords progression :) Thanks for the answer and for the teaching lessons you make available here!
@@IgorKryltsov this chord progression was played broken (notes separate)
@@grassrootspiano Thanks, so technically chord progression broken is not a chord progression and has no own term/name. It is just your video description confused me 'Practice chord progressions' - I watched the video and said - this is not a chord progression as to how I understand it :). I am practising scales and finger dexterity exercises and haven't touched chords yet.
@@IgorKryltsov it's OK, interesting thoughts we're going from one chord to another hence the name progression
What would you call the title?
@@IgorKryltsov I remember now I didn't have much room on the thumbnail call and see if I can switch it to this broken chord pattern
@@grassrootspiano I read a bit more on chord progressions and I am talking here as a beginner :) It turns out you can play a chord harmonic (all keys together) or ascending/descending - keys in sequence. In this case for example playing V-I can be playing G-B-D together and after C-E-G together - chord progression. But if you play sequentially G-B-D-C-E-G it will also be called a chord progression played ASC. Right? What I do not understand is why playing sequentially G-B-D-C-E-G is called a chord progression but playing for example sequentially C-D-E-F-G-A-B-C is called a scale :)