I'm writing from France , and I tell you , no matter what somebody else could say , I tell you that I really enjoy your lessons because ,you take time to explain and you also don't deny the level we have but just help us to improve it- Don't stop please...be sure that you videos oline , bless almost one person. Me!!! Thank you very much-(with the french accent!!!) (smile)
Nice to see the key circle written with flat keys on the right! So chords naturally progress clockwise, the way time flows. There are other advantages of showing the "key clock" this way. One is that the keys on the RIGHT of the clock use black keys on the RIGHT of the black key groups of 3 and 2. (eg Bb major uses Bb on the right of the 3, plus Eb on the right of the 2.) And vise versa.
I also like your swing LH walking bassline pattern on the "power chord" (1, 5, 1) for each chord.
@ExpressStaveNotation Well said. My first teacher wrote the circle this way and for years showed me new ways of reading it. I'm still discovering little things on the circle that relate to the 'bigger picture'. Not sure why the circle of fifths (the circle written anti-clockwise) is taught in most methods. Perhaps it's because classical texts generally introduce sharp keys before flat keys?? I'm not sure... but I do prefer this one.
@RustyCoathanger2 Thank you. We're very keen to get the site back up. It's been down for a while now because we've been getting an upgrade with heaps more features. It shouldn't be too much longer. If you've subscribed to our channel we'll let you know when we're back up. Thanks again!
Great stuff. These are the kind of exercises that motivate scale practicing. Thanks!
toolatepiano 5 months ago
I'm writing from France , and I tell you , no matter what somebody else could say , I tell you that I really enjoy your lessons because ,you take time to explain and you also don't deny the level we have but just help us to improve it- Don't stop please...be sure that you videos oline , bless almost one person. Me!!! Thank you very much-(with the french accent!!!) (smile)
shsab70 1 year ago
Nice to see the key circle written with flat keys on the right! So chords naturally progress clockwise, the way time flows. There are other advantages of showing the "key clock" this way. One is that the keys on the RIGHT of the clock use black keys on the RIGHT of the black key groups of 3 and 2. (eg Bb major uses Bb on the right of the 3, plus Eb on the right of the 2.) And vise versa.
I also like your swing LH walking bassline pattern on the "power chord" (1, 5, 1) for each chord.
ExpressStaveNotation 1 year ago
@ExpressStaveNotation Well said. My first teacher wrote the circle this way and for years showed me new ways of reading it. I'm still discovering little things on the circle that relate to the 'bigger picture'. Not sure why the circle of fifths (the circle written anti-clockwise) is taught in most methods. Perhaps it's because classical texts generally introduce sharp keys before flat keys?? I'm not sure... but I do prefer this one.
Thanks for your comments!
schoolofmusiconline 1 year ago
thank you, this is absolutely brilliant brilliant, wonderful stuff the best I have seen on youtube.
Where can I get the other lessons? The website seems to be down right now?
RustyCoathanger2 1 year ago
@RustyCoathanger2 Thank you. We're very keen to get the site back up. It's been down for a while now because we've been getting an upgrade with heaps more features. It shouldn't be too much longer. If you've subscribed to our channel we'll let you know when we're back up. Thanks again!
schoolofmusiconline 1 year ago