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genausteph liked a video
(2 weeks ago)
A Busk For Daniela 11am, Sunday 26th February 2012 Pitt St Mall
Featuring: ...
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A Busk For Daniela 11am, Sunday 26th February 2012 Pitt St Mall
Featuring: Chris Dendle, Caitlin Fisher, Chris Nahm, Nicole Nahm, Julienne Orcullo, Emma Storey, Charles Tian and friends.
For more details: http://www.facebo...
See you there :)
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genausteph liked a video
(3 months ago)
How to hear French, German, and Neapolitan 6 chords; all neatly packed i...
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How to hear French, German, and Neapolitan 6 chords; all neatly packed into one song.
Sometimes I like to hear some German, Sometimes I like to hear some French, Sometimes I like to hear a nice diminished seven, Or some other chords that I won't even mention...
The German chord resolves "le so" and "fi so", The French chord is just like it, but with "re" instead of "me" But though I love these nationalities so, Neapolitan makes my day; Neapolitan makes my day.
©2011 David Newman
Don't understand what you're hearing? I've made videos explaining it in a bit more detail. (If this is all way over your head, don't worry; I'll eventually post some more beginning explanations.) See the following two videos:
How to hear French and German augmented 6 chords: http://www.youtub...
How to hear Neapolitan 6 chords http://www.youtub...
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genausteph liked a video
(3 months ago)
Song describing and demonstrating each interval and its inversion.
Thanks...
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Song describing and demonstrating each interval and its inversion.
Thanks everybody for sharing, and for your kind comments! Especially from bloggers like Roger Evans, who claimed "It may be the best thing since Ut queant laxis." Positive hyperbole is welcomed! :-)
Lyrics seem redundant with videos like this, but here they are anyway:
A minor third is a major sixth in inversion. A major third is a minor sixth in inversion. A perfect fourth is a perfect fifth in inversion. Oh... A minor second's a major seventh. A major second's a minor seventh. And oh... A perfect unison's an octave in this game. But what we call a tritone stays the same.
[Note that the final line is not true if we identify that interval as an augmented fourth, in which case its inversion is a diminished fifth, and vice versa. Hence "what we call a tritone."]
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