 Hi guys, so let's learn the popular song from Frozen called Let It Go. So there are basically three to four sections in the song. There's a verse, there's obviously the famous chorus. So I'm going to probably teach you that first. And then you have your bridge which is a very interesting connecting part which right. And then you have that famous piano intro. You have that. So I'm going to teach you the piano intro last. We're going to start with the chorus. Let it go. And the song is basically on A flat major. And most of the chorus is 1564. So that's one of A flat which is A flat. Five is E flat. Six is F minor. And four is D flat. So basically let it go. So that happens basically three times. And then na na na na na na na. Okay. So in the first chorus when you play Let It Go, we use broken chords at the top register. Let me just show you that here. So that's, let it go, A flat, let it go. So do that twice for two cycles. So A flat. E flat. F minor. D flat major. Again. A flat. Let it go. E flat. F minor and then here you can follow the singing itself you can either you can you can come back down an octave on the piano and continue the broken chord pattern so the first two lines again where we go let it go let it go let it go and then and that's so there C minor and B major happen quickly very interesting chords right and then so I'm gonna break this down later what happens to lead to each section but for now let's just focus on the chorus and chorus one you play high and then all the other choruses I'll give you a pattern which I think works let it go you will come to that a little later so let's now move into the worst part so in the worst part well in verse one what happens is you play the same tune as the intro along with the singer so the intro you play all that I've written in blue blue color here in this note sheet and start by playing it one octave higher and then for the verse you come down an octave when the singer starts singing so let's first look at the intro with only the right hand that's your line one okay and then line two let's do line one and line two okay and line three and line four very very similar but one or two notes here in there okay so first first line is first half of the line three is same as first half of line one so in line one you did line three you're doing okay let's do line three and then the only thing which changes in line two and line four is just the last note so line one you go sorry line two E flat D flat and then line four you're doing because the chord is major okay let's look at that third line and the chords which go with this are F minor D flat major E flat major E flat major here and the first line B flat minor and the second line B flat major but hey it doesn't really matter much because in the left hand the piano basically plays fifth chords but if you're playing the chords of the song it will be F minor D flat major E flat major B flat minor the first time the second time the second time the third line E flat back to minor and the fourth line the end of line line four of the verse will be B flat sus four which is B flat E flat F you can add the B flat as well if you want and then come back to normal B flat major so if I'm just doing the chords of the verse I'm sorry I digressed I'm finishing the entire verse and then we'll also add the intro to the verse and you'll already note in the intro right so if you're playing chords in the verse section it'll be F minor D flat major E flat major B flat minor second line now your piano tune in the right hand can go with just fifth so if you're only playing chords then you can let someone else play the tune right but if you are also playing the tune then it's probably a nice thing to do the fifth chords so F fifth D flat E flat B flat so let's repeat that F D flat E flat B flat all in fifths right one more time last time okay so let's do that again this is your intro where your piano will play the melody high and your when it comes to the verse or the singing part you just take the whole thing and bring it down an octave okay let's see how it sounds with the intro next and then you play the same thing lower right and so on and then it goes to the the pre-chorus of the song so before I do that let me just do the entire verse one going to the pre-chorus one okay let's see how that sounds and then you just hold chords F minor this is the third line D flat E flat B flat and then you hold okay now we are going to the pre-chorus quite straightforward D flat okay and the chorus I've already told you guys so let's look at the pre-chorus one more time D flat again well now they know let it go that's what I showed you earlier right so this whole section pretty much repeats one more time and the song continues so let's just do verse going into pre-chorus going into chorus so that we are very clear with everything okay then the verse starts and then you hold the chords now hold it B flat sus for me major pre-chorus E flat with them no play the same chords lower then goes to the next part okay so I hope the intro verse pre-chorus and chorus are sorted for you guys now coming for the part between the chorus and verse 2 and then we look at the part between the chorus and the bridge and then of course the bridge and then I think we are done so let's look at the chorus ending na na na C minor B major D flat we've been away so that's what you can do before the second tune can play it higher if you want so that's the lead-in you play that little tune and then we go back to verse 2 okay so okay let me show you only the right hand okay so I've written down the notes here you can check it out or else just follow me as I play I'm just basically playing the violin the string part right I've just adapted it on the piano so let's do it again from the end of the chorus 1 so just note for verse number 2 we only do these two lines we don't have to do the first two lines it's just these two lines and you can then go to the pre-chorus chorus yet again and at the end of chorus 2 we then go to the bridge which is a very interesting D flat driven section so you go it's very tough to do this spot because there's a lot of orchestration but what I've basically adapted on the piano could be something like this na na na na na na and then or you can actually start it immediately immediately. And next part. And then you can do a phrasing which I have written down here, 3 plus 3 plus 2. So that means each chord is in 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, still D flat, now E flat. Okay, so let me break that down for you. It's a little bit confusing, so from the singing part. Two bars each of each chord. You repeat that. And then it goes to the chord change E flat. And then you need to sustain these chords. D flat, E flat, B flat, minor, D flat. And you end with 5 hits of D flat. Or. And the last chorus you could just play with a bang. You can just play chords. And that's pretty much the end of the song where you end with a D flat major. So let's just conclude, guys. The song has quite a bit of things, right? So you have an intro that, and then that carries on in the verse. And then you have the pre-chorus. That takes you to the chorus. Let it go. Let it go. And at the endings of each chorus there are two very interesting passages. One is it takes you to an interlude. You may want to rewind the video if you want to learn that. And then the next second chorus ending takes you to the bridge. You're basically playing the vocal line but you just play the chord, the fifth chord. In that 3-3-2 phrasing, right? So I hope you guys learned something from this lesson. Have fun playing this amazing song. Cheers!