Tonic, Dominant and SubDominant Chords. Intro to playing by ear
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All Comments (19)
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@shadowzard7 Yeah, I - IV and V chords can be played over "anything"
Because eg: C = CEG, F = FAC and G = GBD which covers every note in the scale, so one of those chords will always sound right. So seeing as you can't go wrong, they get over used in my opinion.
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@worker31 i guess watch all the vids where shes wearing the same shirt...lol..sucks tho, let me know if u find it
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She is A very good teacher. Better than any other one Iv'e seen.
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i have been waiting for years for someone to explain this too me, why are most teacher so tight? oh wait becuase if they tell you evreything you only have to pay for one lesson.... i love this woman
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i have been waiting for years for someone to explain this too me, why are most teacher so tight? oh wait becuase if they tell you evreything you only have to pay for one lesson....
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my theory teacher said 75% of rock and roll lies in the tonic, subdominant and dominant
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i love this lady....she is an amazing teacher
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Thank you for all your wonderful lessons. I read a lot, asked numerous people questions, but no one could explain to me what I was trying to understand about music. Today I am just so thrilled I found you and your easy to understand lessons!
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Great teacher we've got here.
I = Tonic
ii = Supertonic
iii = Mediant
IV = Subdominant
V = Dominant
vi = Submediant
vii = Leading Tone
And the capitalization of the roman numerals is specific to the Major scale in this case.
I want to have a teacher like her!
RomuloGDO 2 years ago 14
The last part of this presentation you have not told which is the next video to watch. As the last part of this video you just kept talking but did not lead to the next. Please help, which is the next video to watch.
Regards
worker31 3 years ago 9