Dr. Dre - Still Dre (piano)
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Uploader Comments (Seven7Productions)
Top Comments
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My left ear is lonely :(
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All Comments (223)
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lyrics ? CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLING CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG CLONG ... Maintenant tu connais la musique :)
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Why did you start on the 29th second ? xD
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fuck sake, right speaker only?
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finally somone who knows how to give a good totorial
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awesome and so simple
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Fail man, there ARE chords
first one is C-E-A
second one is B-E-A
third one is B-E-G
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You got the chords wrong buddy. You need to check your cords again.
tonebeatz24 1 year ago 9
@tonebeatz24 no see, "Still Dre" does NOT have any "chords" in the piano part. It is a two note melody. Grab the official sheet music, learn to read sheet music, compare the two, realize I'm right, then comment. There are no CHORDS. A chord is a note comprised of 3+ semitones, the piano "jingle" that Scott plays is a two note jingle, and is played alternatively, not as a chord stab.
Seven7Productions 1 year ago 16
@Seven7Productions technically, you can have chords that less than 3 semitones. in fact they occur quite regularly in music. and the name of them is Diads. also, this tutorial is close enough to fake it, however it is wrong from the perspective of note-for-note accuracy.
DREAUXENTERTAINMENT 9 months ago 3
@DREAUXENTERTAINMENT Well first of all it's dyad. and sure you can have dyads. Harmonic dyads?...not so much. But you cannot have a chord with less than 3 semitones....cause it would be called...a....you guessed it....DYAD. And the only time a dyad is called a chord, is every 5th. However, Scot storch does NOT play a chord on the right hand, and guess what he plays...an alternating b flat/g sharp dyad.
Seven7Productions 9 months ago