 Hi guys, let's now learn Ambar Saria. So in this song, it's very groove-oriented and the whole groove pattern is something which Which is really catchy. So I'll just play you the groove and try to listen to it and get a feel of it There's also another groove which goes There are lots of these what I call Fleming co-sections where you take a chord And the reason why this is all happening is because we are trying to play a guitar song on the piano It's very much a guitar song But again, this is for all of you pianists who really love the song and want to figure out a way to play it Because you can't play the guitar. Okay, so on the guitar what he's doing He's doing tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank So you need to first get that rhythm into your system and then it's just a matter of chords Right, it'll have the same chords as any other song on a given scale. So you go So what I do on the piano is So you do do the first chord twice And do the second chord thrice so you do If you're a little bit more Intermediate on the piano you can try to play the pulse here and play that cool rhythm in the right hand So just the right hand And whenever you're doing the three Sustain the last of the three that's also what they do really well on the on the guitar Could play that comp it on the same way on the piano left hand Play the pulse You can probably feel the drummer grooving in the song right so most of the Song is going to be on that and different chords and the chords are there on your right hand side in the video You can see the different sections. There's As always in a lot of the Bollywood songs and the Indian film songs There'll always be two unique verses Some sung by male and female voice In this case, I think it's just a female singer throughout But nevertheless, there's always going to be an extra verse You have to learn verse one will be with a different set of chords Verse two will again be with a different set of chords and maybe even a different rhythm However in this song the rhythm is very consistent. It's So the way I would count it if you want to do it more specifically would be to count 16th notes or to count eight notes if you're counting eight notes One and two and one and two and three and four and one and two and three It's tough for me to count it in clap, but you get the idea. You can either count with eight notes or with 16th notes One and a two and a three and a four and a one Something I think counting 16 notes would be easier one and a two and a three and a four And one and a two and a three and a four and a right. So that's a very what we call Very groovy rhythm And we also say it's very syncopated because none of the beats are actually on the main beat if it was on the main beat It'll be really sleepy So I would recommend that you guys watch another lesson of mine where I've broken down a very popular ARM and song Urvasi and We've dealt with a lot of these 16th note phrasings and how to count them So once you watch that video, I think you'll get a better perspective, right? There's I've of course started on the bass guitar, but I don't think it'll make a big big difference to understand the concept So tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank tank, right? So now I'm going to do it with the singing and we'll try and do verse one going to the Pre-chorus and we won't do the chorus and then I'll break down the chords and call it out as Navin is singing First of all the intro is E minor, D major, A minor and B minor. I repeat E minor, D major, A minor and then we do like So you take the B 7th chord which is B D sharp F sharp and then a 7th would be with the flattened root That is A Flat by two basically B B flat A So once you end the section And then the singer starts singing right so let's try and do the Verse one, please Come back to the the chorus we were like wanting itching to play it, but We have to also teach you so in the verse you have E minor D major E minor B minor And just watch there are some cases where he plays B minor and some cases where he plays B major I think a better way to look at it is B majors before the chorus and B minors during the verse so verse chords verse one rather would be Can we just do this with Navin please one two three B minor B minor B major Okay, and then in the pre-chorus he basically goes G major 7th. It's G major with a Major 7th. So a lot of the Bollywood songs I found have this these extensions which make it very interesting to listen It's not like your normal G major which most guitar players play He plays a major 7th extension. So if you can play that great, otherwise, you can just cap it off by playing G major D major And you end it I've marked a purple thing there where you go do that Fleming co thing Just a glide so this is your chord So instead of doing a boring you can try and do Just plate one by one, but then really fast Now on a guitar it's second second nature on the guitar because it's six strings and anyway You play the guitar like that, right? So inevitably you just have to make that process slow and you get that effect on the piano You have to physically play the notes. So it's a nice technique to to develop Play a lot of this Latin and Spanish stuff as well, okay, so We'll do the verse and then the pre-chorus and I'll call out the chords as we are singing it Pre-chorus B F sharp B Okay, so the chorus is of course almost the same chords as you played in the verse But instead of the B minor at the end you do a B major So that's going to be E minor D major a minor and B and that last B you can play a B 7th So B 7th is nothing but a B major with a flat 7 on the top This makes it be major right Then you add the 7th which is nothing but a flat 7 from your root Okay, so let's now do the chorus which is four times of E minor E minor D major E minor B7 Just think of the two chords at a time which will make up one bar E D A minor B 7th E D and remember the two three trick E D D D A B B B and so on let's go When we sang the normal chorus it for four times it was That happens four times when he ends the chorus he continues singing the line, but we change the chords So we change the chords actually to give the listener the hint of the interlude chords Which are I think all played on the harmonium. There are two amazing interludes Which I don't think I'll have the time to tell you maybe I'll transcribe it and share that as well in another video if you're interested So you go basically So the last two umbers are yours at the end of the four times we are going to change the chords to E minor G7 G major 7th D major 7th and B major Okay, can we just do the so this is what you could call as the post chorus or the two bars before After the chorus after which the tune is going to go Stuff like that happens on the harmonium sound right one let's just do the Whole chorus so for four times it's going to be E minor D major A minor and B7 for the last two times It's going to be E minor G major 7th D major 7th and B major It's quite an interesting song. It's quite tricky Come on chorus one two go A minor Loot comes and then verse two as always in a Bollywood song Your verse two is going to be something very very different His melody is going to change completely and it's also quite an interesting melody. It's it's a little dissonant It uses some of the dissonant intervals, but I guess that's what has Gives it its charm. Okay. Let's do the verse two I'm going to play it on the piano first try to follow along. This is verse two which is written as V2 Okay, and as always there is a Google Drive file which you can download and You can see all the chords which I'm talking about as I'm you can probably have that with you while you're learning this lesson Sure, let's now do the verse two now in one two three go You Prince basically twice and then we we stop that so That's G Going to D and then G again then C sharp minor And D major 7th. Okay. Let's first do the sec the first half of verse two three go D major 7th G C sharp minor D D G again We'll come back to that shortly. So once you finish G C sharp minor D Once that's done twice you end it again with your flamenco stop That's quite nice Going to be major for those of you don't know a suspended chord It's the major chord with a sus for that means you move the third up to a suspended for Right, and it's a very very cool card I've also done a video of this Another video on YouTube called creative suspended cards We'll try to put a link in the description go through that so whenever we stop the verse two it goes to this D sus for D major, okay, we'll just do that once more please three go One more time C sharp in the pause The second half of verse two is as follows E minor D major a minor again a minor D major so on and so forth, right So, let's just do the whole verse two. It's quite a complicated verse So please follow the chords and follow me playing I'll try to count it and perhaps we'll do it slightly slower now in a One two three go D C sharp minor D major C sharp D minor D major Post chorus two so post chorus one we did different chords, which I showed you post chorus two There's some really interesting cause we're very jazzy actually so he sings pretty much the same thing right and the chords just Incredibly changed and right after that is over it goes back to the verse and then the chorus repeats So I'm just gonna conclude by just dealing with this Section I know it's been a while in this lesson But please stick with us because this is a long song or at least there are lots of parts in this song Which need to be talked about okay, so let's just do The chorus to going into the post chorus one two three A minor A minor Back to that right so all this stuff goes on and So post chorus to I'm playing E minor A minor A minor D major G E minor A minor D major G major then C This is a very very cool That's F sharp minor seven Flat five that's what it's called right so how do you play an F sharp minor seven flat five? You basically take an F sharp minor flat the five Then take a minor seventh and play that with it And an F sharp minor seven flat five will then go to So let's just do that whole pre-chorus A minor D major G major seventh minor seven flat five interesting chord progression every chord is quite unique and It's It's it's it's a very interesting motion I've written down F sharp minor seventh in the note sheet as a phi the greek symbol phi you may have Learned at some point. I guess not but phi is something like that. You can find it in the note sheet So try to follow that chord and try to learn something out of the song First of all when I started I talked about the cool rhythm Which is a 16 note rhythm watch my other lessons which are in the description You learn a lot more about the rhythm patterns. I spoke about Uh, then you have different sections verse chorus The whole songs on E minor it's quite an exciting exciting song so all the best trying to learn it and If you have any doubts or any questions Leave a comment and we'll try and sort you out. Cheers Don't forget to like Subscribe hit that bell icon for notifications Leave us a comment for any other video you'd like us to do next And don't forget to share the video with all your musician friends. Cheers