Japan's favourite chord progression and why it works

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  • čas přidán 14. 05. 2024
  • The "royal road" progression (王道進行, Ōdō shinkō) is to Japan what "the axis progression" is to the Western world. This chord progression comes up time and time again across Japanese music, to the point that to many listeners, the progression has a "Japanese" sound to it.
    SOURCES:
    The Quintessential VGM Chord Progression: • The Quintessential VGM...
    Recipe for an anime song: • Recipe for an Anime so...
    The anime chord progression: • Common Chord Progressi...
    Rick Ashtley is a magical girl: • RICK ASTLEY IS A MAGIC...
    My own original music is available on Spotify: sptfy.com/davidbennett 🎶
    And, an extra special thanks goes to Douglas Lind, Vidad Flowers, Ivan Pang, Waylon Fairbanks, Jon Dye, Austin Russell, Christopher Ryan, Toot & Paul Peijzel, the channel’s Patreon saints! 😇
    SUPPORT ME ON PATREON: / davidbennettpiano 🎹
    0:00 Introduction
    0:45 Japanese examples
    2:36 Western examples
    4:33 why does it work?
    8:35 Piano outro

Komentáře • 4,8K

  • @DavidBennettPiano
    @DavidBennettPiano  Před rokem +2106

    Another great example of this chord progression that came out after I uploaded the video is “Peaches” by Jack Black from the Super Mario Movie 🍑

    • @southhour5241
      @southhour5241 Před rokem +12

      Great video thanks for the content made a progression in E major within 2 mins of watching. You inspire bless you.

    • @therealcaldini
      @therealcaldini Před rokem +1

      I’ve always liked Pizzicato 5 - do they use the western or the royal road chord progression?

    • @monotonehell
      @monotonehell Před rokem +16

      Highly intellectual rickrolling.

    • @tiyenin
      @tiyenin Před rokem +19

      Question. Since the resolution is the minor vi, wouldn't it make more sense to analyze as minor?
      bVI bVII v i

    • @DavidBennettPiano
      @DavidBennettPiano  Před rokem +32

      @@tiyenin you certainly could do that. I stuck with the major scale reading as that is what most other sources do. With aeolian stuff it can work just as well analysing it as the relative minor. 😊

  • @KazeShiniSK
    @KazeShiniSK Před rokem +12226

    it's like a progression that makes you want to never give it up

  • @lmahu6627
    @lmahu6627 Před rokem +7184

    When that chord progression was played for the first time, I almost had a heart attack. It's like getting Rickrolled without actually getting Rickrolled.

    • @a-s-greig
      @a-s-greig Před rokem +216

      "Together Forever" came to mind for me.

    • @tacobell2009
      @tacobell2009 Před rokem +114

      God, I know I literally almost died the last time I got rickrolled. This needs to be banned. Rickrolling is dangerous!!!

    • @markmeyer9958
      @markmeyer9958 Před rokem

      I just heard the title screen song of Hatoful Boyfriend in my head when it played. czcams.com/video/H81MZRLr1kM/video.html

    • @araxshiriau9275
      @araxshiriau9275 Před rokem +3

      @@tacobell2009 ?

    • @KeivSquirrel
      @KeivSquirrel Před rokem +4

      @@tacobell2009
      Are you joking? If so, lol.

  • @francodangelo2874
    @francodangelo2874 Před 5 měsíci +434

    This feels like the most elaborate Rick roll I've ever fallen for in my entire life

    • @IagoMartinsJ
      @IagoMartinsJ Před 12 dny

      I was at 03:25 and read you comment, asking why..... Not long till I found out

    • @nickjohnsontx
      @nickjohnsontx Před 9 dny +1

      The way he initially plays the progression on the piano doesn’t help.

    • @Bangaudaala
      @Bangaudaala Před 4 dny

      Got together forever'ed more than anything

  • @z-nab27
    @z-nab27 Před 7 měsíci +698

    This explains why I get such a positive feeling when I listen to japanese music. As someone who tends to worry a lot, I always get a hopeful feeling after listening and it’s very motivating!

    • @adriandave9307
      @adriandave9307 Před 3 měsíci +45

      It also feels nostalgic sometimes

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis Před měsícem +12

      Ahhhhh yess!!!! I love them cuz they tell stories in the lyrics and are more specific and descriptive compared to American pop songs!

    • @Munni33
      @Munni33 Před 10 dny +1

      I agree with you, especially those 80s anime openings ✨

    • @welp6653
      @welp6653 Před dnem

      @@princessthyemisyea American songs are all just like S%# S?# F_#%

  • @111ram1
    @111ram1 Před rokem +20333

    Can't believe it took this long for you to do a Rickroll. You'd think as a music theory channel there would be more opportunities for it.

    • @uitham
      @uitham Před rokem +335

      i need to hear the piranha plant sleeping theme mixed with rickroll vocals now

    • @edbrito-swdev
      @edbrito-swdev Před rokem +319

      Well, you know the rules and so do I.

    • @colywolygaming4643
      @colywolygaming4643 Před rokem +90

      There have been a few other hidden rickrolls throughout the channel's older videos if you look closely 😉

    • @caulder2046
      @caulder2046 Před rokem +1

      He actually did it in one of his first videos years ago!
      czcams.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/video.html

    • @moscowguitarman
      @moscowguitarman Před rokem +141

      This comment should have a spoiler warning. 😉

  • @KG-Lime
    @KG-Lime Před rokem +5074

    I'm from Japan (born and raised), and yes this chord progression itself makes me feel like I'm home immediately.

    • @galeblan
      @galeblan Před rokem +38

      Hi, can we start chatting somewhere? I'm from Russia and I'm really interested in Japan!

    • @cquirkyfish
      @cquirkyfish Před rokem +78

      おかえりなさい

    • @TheGreenThunder1607
      @TheGreenThunder1607 Před rokem +6

      Do you get that with dear maria from all time low?

    • @ClovesnSpice
      @ClovesnSpice Před rokem +33

      I (for some reason) read "makes me feel like I'm home immediately" as "makes me feel like I'm *horse* immediately"

    • @soturn0
      @soturn0 Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​@@ClovesnSpice why 🤣

  • @jeshie3736
    @jeshie3736 Před 9 měsíci +160

    This chord progression sounds like what really really missing someone feels like. Your happy at the thought of that person but also sad at the same time because there not here.

  • @025Bar
    @025Bar Před 5 měsíci +287

    I remember hearing this progression in songs from shows like Pokémon and Inuyasha and I felt like my doubts are just thoughts,like I can accomplish anything. It’s so nostalgic

    • @viscountrainbows2857
      @viscountrainbows2857 Před 4 měsíci +10

      My Will, my favorite Inu theme aside from Fukai Mori, uses this progression as well I am sure, if not something dangerously similar. I was obsessed from first listen. I'm not a musicologist but I like picking apart what makes my music taste tick.

  • @momerathe
    @momerathe Před rokem +2599

    Never quite coming to a full resolution feels like a very Japanese storytelling aesthetic to me.

    • @thefakepie1126
      @thefakepie1126 Před rokem +113

      I think it does resolve to the minor i, for some reason david took this chord as "IV V iii vi" never resolving to the tonic I, but I strongly feel this is a minor chord progression, to me it resolve to the minor i and the "iii" is the minor v, it's litteraly a v to i, he took the minor v as a slight resolution but to me it's tension, in fact there's a popular variation of this chord progression where instead of a minor v it's a major V (or a dominant7 V or a diminished vii°) resolving again to the minor i to add even more tension and resolution, making it a V to i (my guess is that it's not as often used because with the minor v you keep everything in the natural minor scale), to me it goes: point of rest maybe slight tension (it's a chord just below the next chord and it's gonna start a movement upward) tension (this chord wants to resolve, and we have upward movement now, so it's wanting to resolve up to the minor i wich is right above) more tension (instead of going up it goes down edging that resolution with another chord that want to resolve to the minor i) and resolution (with the tonic minor i), that's the interpretation that feels to me the most accurate to how the chord progression makes me feel

    • @yuyiya
      @yuyiya Před rokem +106

      @@thefakepie1126 I like your functional analysis! ✔
      But please, do take a breath! 😉 - put a full stop (period) in occasionally, like this -> . Makes for much easier reading and better understanding.

    • @thefakepie1126
      @thefakepie1126 Před rokem +77

      @@yuyiya ........................................

    • @CarlSong
      @CarlSong Před rokem +27

      Mandopop expands on this chord progression by taking it another 4 bars: IV-V-iii-vi-ii-V-I-(I7 to loop back, I to stay resolved).

    • @yuyiya
      @yuyiya Před rokem +31

      @@thefakepie1126 yeah, just like that! 😆

  • @SxC97
    @SxC97 Před rokem +4993

    I've wondered for YEARS why Japanese anime openings and video game soundtracks sounded like _that_ . They all had a similar feel that I couldn't quite put my finger on since I don't have a background in music theory. Thanks you for answering a decade long question for me!

    • @mushroom11g55
      @mushroom11g55 Před rokem +26

      What constitutes a background in music theory?

    • @Qwerty-ns9yk
      @Qwerty-ns9yk Před rokem +246

      @@mushroom11g55 basic knowledge about chords and progressions

    • @takigan
      @takigan Před rokem +98

      @@mushroom11g55
      I had to take 4 semesters of music theory as part of my music degree. Whether it's Music Theory, or Game Theory, or Evolutionary Theory, a theory is simply a body of observations about a particular subject. All 3 are theories that you could study for many years and not fully understand. The amount of study you've had in it makes up your "background".

    • @mushroom11g55
      @mushroom11g55 Před rokem +8

      @@takigan where can I study for free?

    • @rosetyong
      @rosetyong Před rokem +44

      @@mushroom11g55 CZcams 😊

  • @to6837
    @to6837 Před 2 měsíci +50

    As a Japanese person, this may be the nostalgia I feel when I listen to Western songs from the 80's.

  • @EkoSo
    @EkoSo Před 9 měsíci +62

    The nostalgia bomb you put with the example songs in the beginning almost broke me

  • @itsaUSBline
    @itsaUSBline Před rokem +3306

    It's kind of funny actually, I've always thought Together Forever felt like an anime song. It's got that sort of calculated sappiness. I think a good word for the vibe of this progression is sentimental, it's like reflectively emotional without being necessarily sad and can lean either direction, either more bright and happy or more somber and bittersweet.

    • @ippotsk
      @ippotsk Před rokem +97

      There's also his other hit "Don't Say Goodbye", which I think has that 80's anime opening cheesiness down to a T.

    • @southhour5241
      @southhour5241 Před rokem +24

      Sharigan levels of assessment there senpai.

    • @Pheonix8877
      @Pheonix8877 Před rokem +12

      Yeah, I was playing around with the progression on piano and it definitely hits different when you use different inversions and play with the placement

    • @TheCognitiveDissident
      @TheCognitiveDissident Před rokem +31

      “Calculated sappiness” I love that description XD Very accurate

    • @justanuglyboy
      @justanuglyboy Před rokem +19

      And to be completely honest, for me "Together Forever" is better song than "Never Gonna....".
      No reason, it's just feel better.

  • @OfficialTigerino
    @OfficialTigerino Před rokem +8200

    I'm Japanese and while I enjoy the video I wouldn't entire say that Odo 王道 translates to "easy way". It's more used as in the "most popular / common / basic way" and which doesn't usually mean the easy way. It's very nuanced, but in a culture where tradition is deemed important that efficiency and ease, 邪道 (antonym to 王道 and mean "malicious way") often is the easier / efficient way.
    I know this doesn't really impact your main point, but something I wanted to share.
    Edit: a fellow commenter suggested that "well-trodden path" might be easier for anglophones to understand.

    • @z-e-r-o-
      @z-e-r-o- Před rokem +153

      私も同感です。「王道」という言葉は「定番」という意味で使われることが多いですね。この「王道進行」という言葉も「J-POPでよく使われる定番のコード進行」という意味で使われていると思います。
      辞書によればたしかに「royal road (安易な方法・近道)」の訳語でもあるようですね。けれど「王道進行」の場合は「安易」のようなネガティブな意味合いは薄く、むしろ儒教の「王道楽土」に近いポジティブな意味合いを感じます。

    • @stoneagedjp
      @stoneagedjp Před rokem +50

      @@z-e-r-o- 面白い解説、ありがとうございました。

    • @yuyiya
      @yuyiya Před rokem +101

      Thanks for the information 👍! This is also nuanced but perhaps the predictive text got the better of your excellent English? I think maybe you meant to say "... in a culture where tradition is deemed more important _than_ efficiency and ease ...". Long story short, your point is that the phrase "the royal road" in Japan connotes "the best way", rather than "a shortcut" or "the easy way". If I understand you correctly!

    • @desolateleng9943
      @desolateleng9943 Před rokem +75

      Japanese has so many of these interesting expressions that can be so difficult to translate! I was so confused the first time I ran into this particular one, and it took a long time before I started to understand what it meant. And your explanation helped me understand it better, so thank you! It's more like the "classic" way of doing things, because it's not really a negative thing, if I understand it correctly? I first came across it as the name of a fantasy genre, where it seems to be the type of fantasy fiction that contains the typical things like magic, dragons, and elves and that sort of thing.

    • @OfficialTigerino
      @OfficialTigerino Před rokem +55

      @@desolateleng9943 glad to know my comment helped you! Good luck on your journey 💪 I'd say "classic way" is like 85% good. It can be the classic and Odo way, but Odo is like the most popular way / the staple / the way something should be, and may not always mean the classic (in regards of time).
      One example I thought of right now is from sushi. Nowadays, the toro cuts from tuna will probably be considered Odo, but it isn't a classic (it's relatively new to consume fatty tuna). But since it's like the norm now to order Toro, it's commonly considered as Odo.

  • @data4163
    @data4163 Před 10 měsíci +19

    Those chords will never let you down or desert you

  • @urphakeandgey6308
    @urphakeandgey6308 Před 10 měsíci +114

    Just hearing the chords gave me a very "happy hardcore" vibe. I think a lot of old Happy Hardcore tracks also used this extensively. "Have You Ever Been Mellow" comes to mind, although that's a remix.
    Always loved that chord progression because of how "happy" it often sounded... And now I have to face the fact I've been willingly Rick rolling myself for years.

    • @gossipboynyc9625-VN
      @gossipboynyc9625-VN Před 3 měsíci +1

      Definitely!

    • @easterlinear
      @easterlinear Před měsícem +2

      What is this ‘happy hardcore’

    • @georgeperez1839
      @georgeperez1839 Před měsícem

      Do you mean easycore?

    • @ShiroCh_ID
      @ShiroCh_ID Před měsícem +1

      now that i think about it DJ Genki's song was also has this same Vibe of Happy but overwhelmingly sad emotion flows to it too! that very feeling as if someone leaves you you sad but happy to see them go

  • @nidohime6233
    @nidohime6233 Před rokem +348

    Is just me, or this cord is popular in japanese pop music because it sounds "hopeful"?
    Is like the perfect one for a hero's theme or a nostalgic medley.

    • @StraightcheD
      @StraightcheD Před rokem +53

      This video uses the term melancholy, but yeah your take is another way to put it.
      People listen to Japanese stuff and express it in many ways which are all in the same ballpark - melancholic, hopeful, sentimental, nostalgic, warmth or even wet, cheesy, corny and embarrassing.
      They all reside in the same part of an emotional spectrum, and are the antithesis to muscular, hard, cruel, tough, cold, or whatever else one perceives.

    • @RevoltOfAges
      @RevoltOfAges Před rokem +16

      I think I’d probably frame it as “hopeful with a touch of melancholy”

    • @djudjutime3224
      @djudjutime3224 Před rokem

      Absolutely agree.

    • @trollingisasport
      @trollingisasport Před rokem +7

      Not hopeful, but rather melancholic and nostalgic. In Japanese, setsunai and natsukashii. These are two emotions that are fundamental to Japanese art and poetry.

    • @elmemearana
      @elmemearana Před rokem +2

      I listen too much Sonic music, and many from his soundtrack sounds like anime openings or J-Rock/J-Pop songs lol. Just like that.

  • @paranoidhumanoid
    @paranoidhumanoid Před rokem +2333

    This chord progression is very uplifting, slightly bittersweet, and gives the songs a _soaring_ and hopeful feel compared to the usual I-IV-V or I-V-vi-IV. A lot of the anime/manga series are centered around the themes of turning pain 痛み / struggle 戦い (IV-V-iii) into hope for the future 希望 (vi).

    • @elmarko9051
      @elmarko9051 Před rokem +50

      I was thinking, airy but not super-serious...love your description.

    • @shanedsouza189
      @shanedsouza189 Před rokem +9

      In a sense it is a variant of 4-5-1-6

    • @RanAcid
      @RanAcid Před rokem +15

      why’d you use japanese if you don’t know the correct term anyway

    • @R0bot4
      @R0bot4 Před rokem +2

      @Punkrock Noir while i like anime, this is an extremely based comment

    • @marw9541
      @marw9541 Před rokem +27

      Using Japanese to pepper words you already used in English was absolutely a choice.

  • @elyottd2178
    @elyottd2178 Před měsícem +17

    You just gave a lot more people an opportunity to remix never gonna give you up into more anime songs

  • @BrookBrayman
    @BrookBrayman Před 4 měsíci +63

    You are helping me return to music theory and playing my guitar in middle age, and you are doing me a world of good. Thank you!

  • @ryota5637
    @ryota5637 Před 11 měsíci +1595

    A video explaining the "just the two of us progression that Westerners prefer" is trending among Japanese. Therefore, watching this video explaining "the royal road progression that the Japanese prefer" actually makes me feel like I'm lost in a mirror world (because I'm Japanese).

    • @silver6380
      @silver6380 Před 7 měsíci +31

      What's the progression they say Westerners prefer?

    • @user-fg9kv5ow6o
      @user-fg9kv5ow6o Před 5 měsíci +62

      So sorry bro, hope you get out of the mirror World soon

    • @user-fp7gq4zo3f
      @user-fp7gq4zo3f Před 5 měsíci

      @@silver63801-5-6-4

    • @pyrotechnic96
      @pyrotechnic96 Před 4 měsíci +26

      Can you link it? I'd love to watch, not sure how much I'd comprehend though. My Japanese is pretty poor these days😢

    • @t.h.7712
      @t.h.7712 Před 4 měsíci +44

      ​@@silver6380 the chord progression from "just the two of us" of Marvin Gaye.
      Lately, I've heard many Japanese video reusing this chord progression and making a new style out of it. It's called Neosoul. This first time I heard it, was on Animal Crossing, don't remember the name but, (I'll give you the link of a great cover of it.). Also in "Colourful" from Meine Meinung (Japanese band)
      And you can also hear it in some great Western incluences like "Honest" from Jorja Smith.
      Gives you some kinda, soul/funk/chill vibe

  • @peakwoop
    @peakwoop Před rokem +2161

    I've never been less ready for a rickroll than now. Awesome video

    • @LaRana08
      @LaRana08 Před rokem +5

      What’s a rickroll?

    • @user-cj4fu8qq9b
      @user-cj4fu8qq9b Před rokem

      @@LaRana08this czcams.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/video.html

    • @auroral0realis
      @auroral0realis Před rokem

      @@LaRana08 czcams.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/video.html
      you can learn about them by watching this informative video :)

    • @luladrgn9155
      @luladrgn9155 Před rokem

      @@LaRana08 you are probably toxic 9 year old / 34 year old florida man or depressed 25 year old. or you're just new to social media

    • @smithjohn383
      @smithjohn383 Před rokem +83

      @@LaRana08 assuming you're not joking, it means that you build up some kind of expectation of something ( not necessarily musical ) and then instead of that you start totally unexpectedly playing Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up".

  • @shortbreadgirlscout3463
    @shortbreadgirlscout3463 Před 3 měsíci +24

    Royal Road Progression lives in my heart. All the American songs that had it also happened to be my favs. 😭

  • @jysmtl
    @jysmtl Před 6 měsíci +31

    Coming late to this thread, I have one observation, after noting that your analysis was fantastic and fascinating (I’m already a subscriber, for the music, and didn’t notice you covered this topic which overlaps with my other deep interest of almost five decades now, Japanese culture and arts). There is a much deeper explanation as to why this progression appeals to Japanese beyond just, as you stated, it became popular and therefore self emulating. Japanese literature, or storytelling, has exhibited the feature of containing “unresolved” storylines since the very beginning, often in the form of “unrequited love”. Even the world’s first novel (or so it is commonly acknowledged, from around the year 1000 AD) the Tale of Genji not only contains story after story of unrequited love, the book itself ends without resolution. Or, as many western scholars say (sometimes complaining ) the book itself “has no ending”. That tradition of embracing the unresolved has continued in Japan now for over 1000 years in countless folk stories, kabuki, novels, manga and anime. I never connected the characteristic to popular music until viewing this video, but after hearing your analysis, the commonality is obvious. Some commenters here argue that the iii serves a tonic function, but I think that argument skirts the point that the iii leaves a clearly more ambiguous, unresolved feeling, begging the progression to simply go on, and on, and on. Very cool! Thank you.

  • @z-e-r-o-
    @z-e-r-o- Před rokem +1919

    Kyohei Tsutsumi, the godfather of J-POP, once said ”Rick Astley’s first album is filled with the sounds that Japanese people like”.
    かつて筒美京平は「リック・アストリーの1stアルバムには、日本人の好むサウンドが詰まっている」と話していたそうです。

    • @HarrysDogmalaysia
      @HarrysDogmalaysia Před rokem +225

      so you are saying is, japan got rickroll therefore they rick roll everyone in japan

    • @BVK.
      @BVK. Před rokem +9

      To this day, I don't understand what is "Rick Roll"

    • @tvrkm6897
      @tvrkm6897 Před rokem +26

      So, have you seen the Japanese cover of Never Gonna Give You Up? The one I know is by American English cover artists on CZcams, but it still works really well.

    • @HarrysDogmalaysia
      @HarrysDogmalaysia Před rokem +1

      @Allen Wong kinda forgot japanese R and L almost sound the same

    • @angelvu
      @angelvu Před rokem +27

      @Allen Wong unnecessary

  • @TheRealBlueSwan
    @TheRealBlueSwan Před rokem +919

    It is worth pointing out that the writers of those two Rick Astley hits, Stock/Aitken/Waterman, used this chord progression on a TON of their hits, not just those two Rick Astley hits. It was even referred to as THE chord progression. However, they very often changed it up slightly, just as you point out with Never Gonna Give You Up.

    • @stephenmcg4299
      @stephenmcg4299 Před rokem +43

      Stock, Aitken & Waterman were big in Japan. 🤔

    • @RobertoAsanoNogueira
      @RobertoAsanoNogueira Před rokem +8

      Its actually funny since Together Forever and Never Gonna Give you Up are part of a story that is told in that album.

    • @cwize
      @cwize Před rokem +5

      Yeah, sadly the Stock/Aiken/Waterman trick didn’t age well. Astley’s singles lived on, but those guys were just rubber-stamping their projects in a terribly lazy fashion. 3 seconds into song and you’d be like “well, it’s a SAW production, when the vocals start I’ll figure out who the artist is.” I really wish they didn’t do Donna Summer’s “Another Place in Time” album because there’s @that sound.” (Interestingly the album cover has Donna in Kabuki makeup and the artwork is stylized to look “Japanese” - go figure).

    • @TheRealBlueSwan
      @TheRealBlueSwan Před rokem +2

      @@cwize Really? I love that Donna Summer album. IMO, SAW were vastly underrated by critics.

    • @mbrady2329
      @mbrady2329 Před rokem +2

      @@stephenmcg4299, one of the few times that 'big in Japan' isn't a euphemism for a failing career!

  • @ZDS104
    @ZDS104 Před 5 měsíci +15

    It sound very good, and it has very bright colors, like white with hints of color in the background - and the patterns it creates in my mind's eye are actually like a road, before i even learned that it was called "royal road". Some of the progressions which are more popular in western pop music feel more grayish unless the instrumentals are powerful enough to make it more exiting.

  • @BlockheadJiujitsu
    @BlockheadJiujitsu Před 9 měsíci +98

    This is such a melancholy chord progression in a kind of saccharine way. All the music, but especially the Pokémon themes, make me feel emotional

  • @tristanho1533
    @tristanho1533 Před rokem +1386

    it's not just in japan, it's all over east asia; china, taiwan, malaysia and singapore. we have singers here who are topping the regional charts for decades and their songs regularly use the same chord progression over and over again that's it's a thing to mashup their own and even their fellow artist's songs together, even during their live performances

    • @user-uv8xl1qq8g
      @user-uv8xl1qq8g Před rokem +59

      I have no idea about Malaysia or Singapore but at least One thing is for sure. Taiwan is one of the countries most culturally influenced from Japan. Not only in pop musics fields but in almost all domains of its cultural diorama.
      China in turn has heavily been influenced from Taiwanese musics in 80s-90s period. Teresa teng, Sarah chen etc..
      Actually it's not far-fetched to say China didn't have proper pop musics of their own before 00s.
      China's pop music till 90s or even early 00s are all just an inferior rip-off of that of Japan, Taiwan, Hongkong and more recently, South Korea.
      Before K-pop hypes started around early 00s, East asian pop culture has been under the heavy influence of Japan so It's not strange to come across Japanese-specific elements in other east asian pop musics beforw 00s.

    • @Kburn1985
      @Kburn1985 Před rokem +33

      Singapore has the unique 新谣 signature back in the 60s to 90s which is nothing like anything in Japan or the west or any of its neighbours.
      Unfortunately, under a government and populace that saw everything home grown as inferior, it got strangled and killed by western, Japanese and Taiwanese music. All Singaporean singers these days are basically Taiwanese in all but name. The last 新谣 song is probably 关怀方式 back in the early 90s.
      Globalisation has killed a lot of good traditional music in the name of capitalism and trends.

    • @tristanho1533
      @tristanho1533 Před rokem +21

      @@Kburn1985 agreed! we had legendary xinyao singers with unique authentic sounds popping up in school campuses, which led to songs with distinctive melodies and great lyrics like 细水长流, but sadly our current system doesn't really encourage such things anymore, first with killing off the dialects and next with the speak english programs

    • @Kburn1985
      @Kburn1985 Před rokem +1

      @@tristanho1533 Greatest irony now is they're trying to bring back dialects and hawker culture, after seeing how vapid, empty and soulless "cosmopolitan" capitalist culture is. Unfortunately, they will fail badly, as people already assume 新谣 is part of the low class heartland culture, and would prefer cosmopolitan international acts.
      Tried to get some friends to support local artistes performing 新谣 in a studio the other day, but they just called it low class and changed to venue to timbre, where some vapid band was aping after westerners singing some meaningless indie covers off-tune. Unfortunately, the damage is permanent and 新谣 is gone forever.

    • @edryba4867
      @edryba4867 Před rokem +2

      I didn’t know the word “music” needed a plural.

  • @dbfr2017
    @dbfr2017 Před rokem +906

    I imagine one of the big reasons this chord progression comes up so often in Japanese music is because it's very disco-y. A lot of the western examples you mention are either from the 80's or a throwback to 80's disco, like Versace on the Floor or Rick Astley's music. A lot of Japan's mass media culture stems directly from this particular era of disco and dance-pop, so it makes sense that if they want to make an upbeat song it's going to be largely informed by this approach to songmaking. Dance music is all about keeping you moving, so a chord progression without a definite, hard resolution makes you feel like the song doesn't stop.

    • @pfrancisco2111
      @pfrancisco2111 Před rokem +39

      Exactly this, Stock Aitken and Waterman were huge in Japan, and most modern J-Pop (late 80s, 90s stuff mainly, after the Westcoast Pop influenced "city pop" era) is super influenced by their approach to production and arrangement. The term Eurobeat for example was first used to talk about PWL productions, and most italian productions exported to Japan were kinda knockoffs of that approach.

    • @StraightcheD
      @StraightcheD Před rokem +14

      That's an interesting observation, but personally I think the melancholy is still the main reason. Some progressions just naturally ring accord better with the nature and mindset of people in a particular society.

    • @vanilla5576
      @vanilla5576 Před rokem

      I agree

    • @SamuraiSx19
      @SamuraiSx19 Před rokem +14

      totally not true lol. Don't why everyone when talking about other continents' music just don't give deeper insight and on a whim, everything is prescribed as modern music and common to western influences. No, this progression is not from disco music, and it bears roots in old Japanese music common sense, in traditional music. As also in old music roots of Oriental cultures overall, be it Japanese, African, Arabic etc. Of course, this is not an absolute model of traditional music progression in oriental nations, but a derivate of clash with the modern perception of music and traditional common music sense.

    • @mypoorbraincells
      @mypoorbraincells Před rokem +2

      yea! that's also why when we think of japanese music, we think of those japanese city/dance pop songs!!

  • @tux7k
    @tux7k Před 3 měsíci +8

    I immediately recognized this progression as I listen to lots of songs from there but never thought so many songs had this

  • @gianrossi5361
    @gianrossi5361 Před 5 měsíci +8

    lovely explanation of the subdom, dom, tonic, resolution and tension bit, thank you

  • @6BURG9
    @6BURG9 Před rokem +645

    I feel like it’s prevalence in anime songs/title sequences is exactly due to that sense of movement without resolution that you illustrated. An opening sequence shouldn’t feel resolved, it should engage you right away and then propel you into the story. I think that’s why this progression is so effective in that context.

    • @gastonzabala8477
      @gastonzabala8477 Před rokem +8

      i pressed ctrl+f and write "rick" in order to find "rickroll" and your name showed up lol

    • @6BURG9
      @6BURG9 Před rokem +2

      @Punkrock Noir This isn't anime specific, but thanks for the feedback.

  • @guilhermeodai
    @guilhermeodai Před rokem +1089

    One thing that’s interesting about you including Rick Astley when discussing this topic is that for quite some time people have seen similarities between “Never Gonna Give You Up” and “Robo’s Theme”, from Chrono Trigger’s OST

    • @FeralPhilosopher
      @FeralPhilosopher Před rokem +39

      Good ol' Rick Robo

    • @bsharpmajorscale
      @bsharpmajorscale Před rokem +53

      When my aunt was watching the last Olympics, I overheard when they played Robo's Theme and at first I thought they were Rickrolling the world! :P

    • @jlawrence39
      @jlawrence39 Před rokem +10

      OMG I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT

    • @tom_something
      @tom_something Před rokem +2

      Any discussion of modern Japanese music should include Chrono Trigger.

  • @sayno2lolzisback
    @sayno2lolzisback Před měsícem +8

    It's bright but with a dash of darkness, placing it somewhere between whimsical and nostalgic.

  • @lycan_4223
    @lycan_4223 Před 7 měsíci +3

    i really like this video, probably my most favourite video on youtube and i've watched this video so many times already. So thanks for making such an enjoyable video.

  • @jirehjirehjirehjireh
    @jirehjirehjirehjireh Před rokem +1921

    This chord progression literally SOUNDS like the Hero’s Journey in an RPG. The first is soft and warm, like the protagonist’s home town. The second presents adventure, a challenge for the hero to rise to. The third presents uncertainty and sadness, the hero doubting themselves at a low point. But finally the forth comes, the hero breaks their slump and rises to the occasion.

    • @Scrofar
      @Scrofar Před 10 měsíci +20

      ok this SUPER helps explain a lot, ty!

    • @npcEdwrd
      @npcEdwrd Před 10 měsíci +15

      Really cool way to put it, after all, art is all about expression.

    • @pelerinc
      @pelerinc Před 5 měsíci +9

      For people following along at home, what he's calling the "first" is the IV chord, the "second" is the V chord, etc...

    • @e7193
      @e7193 Před 5 měsíci +5

      cringe

    • @hylianro
      @hylianro Před 4 měsíci +8

      "Hero's Journey" isn't from RPGs, the earliest example seen in human history is the Epic of Gilgamesh. I hope I clear this up for any children unfamiliar with real life heroic tales

  • @Carnaj90
    @Carnaj90 Před rokem +331

    7:52 "Ongoing story." That has got to the most absolute big brain way of describing this. The fact that A LOT of anime/manga have a really long story to them or even after the anime/manga "finishes" people still wait it to go somewhere; they want more. Maybe that's what causes people to want to listen to these kinds of songs on infinite loop.

    • @benosick8542
      @benosick8542 Před rokem +17

      When he said this my immediate thought was "oh like One Piece"

    • @mansman2167
      @mansman2167 Před rokem +1

      @@benosick8542 Still waiting for the sequel: Two Piece

    • @Propane_Acccessories
      @Propane_Acccessories Před rokem +1

      @@benosick8542 The "One Piece" will just end up being the friends the made along the way. Or worse, it's just a dream from the fat guy in Lost

  • @thefallenlime
    @thefallenlime Před 7 měsíci +14

    Just wanted to thank you for this and other similar videos. I'm working on my Master's degree right now. These videos are helping me write music for my digital sequencing course and my capstone project. They've been a great source of new approaches to take in my composition.

  • @roberalonso5897
    @roberalonso5897 Před 11 měsíci

    Great job David! Thank you

  • @xybervid
    @xybervid Před rokem +651

    “O-Do” is commonly used in Japanese to mean the standard way of doing something. Not necessarily better or easier, but accepted as the standard. Adding milk is the “O-Do” way of eating cereal, for example. The opposite is “Ja-Do” which literally means “the snake way” meaning a non-standard way (and not in a good sense.) Eating cereal with water is Ja-Do. So the translation of O-Do Shinkou could simply be something like “the standard chord progression”. Meanwhile, unresolved tension is a big part of Japanese social culture (and subsequently anime content) and I think this chord progression mirrors that nicely by trying to resolve to the tonic but never quite getting there.

    • @TheWanderingNight
      @TheWanderingNight Před rokem +17

      Is it 蛇道 (snake way) or 邪道 (evil way)? They're both pronounced the same, but I've never heard of the 'snake way' etymology before.

    • @OfficialTigerino
      @OfficialTigerino Před rokem +19

      @@TheWanderingNight it's 邪道 the op is wrong in his translation

    • @OfficialTigerino
      @OfficialTigerino Před rokem +35

      邪道 isn't snake way, it's evil/malicious/wrong way. You're referring to 蛇道 which is a Buddhist term that describes a where the punished are turned into a snake.

    • @davespriter
      @davespriter Před rokem +9

      i eat Evil Way cereal. its not too bad

    • @supernerd1999
      @supernerd1999 Před rokem +1

      @@TheWanderingNight I feel like the closest translation would be the mainstream

  • @MrWhositMagig
    @MrWhositMagig Před rokem +1726

    I was wondering why this sounded so familiar and then it hit me:
    I grew up attending Latin American churches. I started playing piano there as a teenager. This is a common progression in many church songs (mostly from the 90’s). Many of the songs would feature a I - ii - V verse with this Japanese progression in the chorus section.

    • @catharticgemini
      @catharticgemini Před rokem +24

      It's also even more interesting when you think of songs like Llorando se Fue which even has the chorus sang in japanese after the third verse (can't confirm if that's the right verse)

    • @arjay3803
      @arjay3803 Před rokem +18

      Now that you've mentioned it, I'm also a church pianist i always use this chords on some songs

    • @thedukeofchutney468
      @thedukeofchutney468 Před rokem +104

      So what you're really saying is that these chords literally have the power of God and anime! 😂

    • @MrWhositMagig
      @MrWhositMagig Před rokem +34

      @@thedukeofchutney468 yea. That’s probably why I always kicked into Super Saiyan when the chorus hit

    • @helenwinter3320
      @helenwinter3320 Před rokem +4

      @@thedukeofchutney468 lmaooo T.T

  • @AncientSlugThrower
    @AncientSlugThrower Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was a great video. It was very insightful, and I learned a lot.

  • @overkill2556
    @overkill2556 Před měsícem +1

    Your channel is resourceful, and giving us quite a lot of example! Even I am recommending your channel for studying chord progression examples to people who is willing to study music composition.

  • @semplaw7865
    @semplaw7865 Před rokem +137

    "Plastic Love" by Mariya Takeuchi and Tatsuro Yamashita have the same progression of "Never Gonna Give You Up" (ii7, V,iii,vi)

    • @asinicw9906
      @asinicw9906 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Ahhh that's why in "everybody's plastic love circulation" mashup those two worked so well together

  • @nikinnorway
    @nikinnorway Před rokem +722

    It evokes hope and has a sense of overcoming challenge. Japanese storytelling is really big on those themes.

    • @Jestersage
      @Jestersage Před 10 měsíci +22

      Pretty much the quintessential Shonen plotline.

    • @rarecrom
      @rarecrom Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@Jestersagejapan ≠ anime

    • @Jestersage
      @Jestersage Před 9 měsíci +27

      @@rarecrom But that anime aspect have to come somewhere. There are reasons why Shonen follow a pattern and LN (especially Isekai, oh god) follows a pattern. Even their Drama is similar, assuming they are not based on anime/manga itself.
      Compare that to K-Drama, for example.
      Popular media (not literature) is more than influenced by a culture; it's a reflection of it

    • @FosFate
      @FosFate Před 9 měsíci +5

      You relate that to music because of the story, not the other way around.

    • @prezentoappr1171
      @prezentoappr1171 Před měsícem

      Add Kurosawa for cinema, even Miyazaki is amazed with him

  • @kewro
    @kewro Před 4 měsíci +1

    bro your explanation andwered the mysterious question "why do we love music?",, at least for me

  • @akshatyadav9467
    @akshatyadav9467 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Wonderfully beautiful video
    Keep up the good work bruv

  • @domtom010
    @domtom010 Před rokem +502

    This is blowing my mind a bit right now. It makes sense, but it also feels weird that there's a clear-cut science to why I've always had an ear for J-Pop/Rock & other Japanese-influenced music.

    • @lordtraxroy
      @lordtraxroy Před rokem +8

      me to even though i come from trance music

    • @sizzle_falco
      @sizzle_falco Před rokem +19

      everything is science man. Even the emotions you feel from music and why you agree with certain emotions that music may portray

    • @r.d.6290
      @r.d.6290 Před rokem +10

      ​@@lordtraxroy that chord progression was used quite a lot in eurotrance or happy hardcore of 90s

    • @AC-hj9tv
      @AC-hj9tv Před 11 měsíci +6

      Weeberosis

    • @verbavolant6895
      @verbavolant6895 Před 10 měsíci

      Because you're a weeb

  • @annoynymouse1146
    @annoynymouse1146 Před rokem +162

    I have noticed that j-pop composers don't like simplicity. They use passing chords, secondary chords, modal interchange or any other harmonic resource whenever they can. For example, instead of a simple I to IV change they do a I - IIm/IV - V7/IV - IV, which is a subdominant 2 5 1. (In C major the chords would be C Gm C7 F). It's a very interesting music style for any music analyst.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem +6

      Look at onepiece's second(?) opening "We Go" 🤯

    • @annoynymouse1146
      @annoynymouse1146 Před rokem +1

      @@YounesLayachi That's a good example

    • @M-yue882
      @M-yue882 Před rokem +2

      @@YounesLayachi you mean 15th opening
      But ok xD

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem

      @@M-yue882 huh ? Were there really 14 different opening songs before "we go" ?

    • @M-yue882
      @M-yue882 Před rokem +3

      @@YounesLayachi
      Yeh exactly
      "We go" is the 1st opening Post Time-skip

  • @pot1tone
    @pot1tone Před 8 měsíci +4

    So the story is that Japan has been Rick Rolling everyone for years!

  • @lee155912000
    @lee155912000 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Youre description of the sounds starting at 6:10 are so accurate to my ears that it seems like youre reading my thoughts.

  • @challalla
    @challalla Před rokem +599

    The Japanese name refers to the saying attributed to the Greek mathematician Euclid, "There is no royal road to geometry," supposedly as a response to the Pharaoh Ptolemy I Soter who wanted a shorter, painless way to learn the subject. So a royal road originally meant an easy path in this context.
    Edited to clarify that this is where the expression originated and is not necessarily how Japanese speakers would understand the term nowadays.

    • @ukatofarticus9046
      @ukatofarticus9046 Před rokem +8

      This is so insightful. Needs to be higher.

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 Před rokem +3

      Yep, Euclid said Ptolemy Soter had to start at the beginning. How else would he get to the final stage of proving that there were only five perfect solids and that Plato was right that they involved irrationals?

    • @OfficialTigerino
      @OfficialTigerino Před rokem +5

      That may be the origin of the Japanese saying but in the context used to day it does not equate "easy path".

    • @challalla
      @challalla Před rokem +6

      @@OfficialTigerino Thanks, I edited my comment to clarify that I was talking about the origin of the expression and not how it is understood today.

    • @quantumleap5156
      @quantumleap5156 Před rokem

      I thought that this was a thing Socrates (or Plato?) said to Alexander the Great

  • @apreviousseagle836
    @apreviousseagle836 Před rokem +155

    The progression sounds like a very melancholic way to resolve tension. This is why it's popular for them. It almost has a romantic quality to it.

    • @lordtraxroy
      @lordtraxroy Před rokem +1

      uplifting trance music use that type of progression as well also trance has become over the time really melancholic and romantic

    • @apreviousseagle836
      @apreviousseagle836 Před rokem

      @@lordtraxroy Nitrous Oxide FTW!! Check out "Show Me" or "Cyan"

  • @ivanwigor1459
    @ivanwigor1459 Před 14 dny

    GREAT VIDEO, GREAT EXAMPLES, THANK YOU ❤

  • @FirestormAudio
    @FirestormAudio Před 4 měsíci +3

    This is great! Gives me inspiration for my own music. The Rick Astley connection is interesting too because both of his hits always reminded me of music you would hear in anime from the late 80s and early 90s. Now I know why.

  • @SuperMario9080
    @SuperMario9080 Před rokem +840

    Ah, now I understand why most Japanese anime songs sound very similar to each other and this explained why. Thanks for the video!
    Also I'm glad you put in Super Mario 64 as an example, so that's pretty neato.

    • @Clausier
      @Clausier Před rokem +11

      The third does all the magic

    • @yurinamaekawa7250
      @yurinamaekawa7250 Před rokem +2

      Meanwhile me who still cant get this iv v iii vi thing

  • @fierce1340
    @fierce1340 Před rokem +460

    So much about anime is about never giving up and this progression never resolving back to the tonic gives it this sense of uplifting endurance that makes you feel like you can get up and keep going.

    • @nathanjstoic
      @nathanjstoic Před rokem +92

      So true, never getting up, never letting down, never running around and never deserting.

    • @AZUCHIGREY
      @AZUCHIGREY Před rokem +27

      They do sometimes make you cry though.

    • @escobarines
      @escobarines Před rokem +27

      Absolutely. "Never gonna give you up" feeling

    • @leonmayne797
      @leonmayne797 Před rokem +3

      Also its often very dramatic and emotional.

    • @justaway6901
      @justaway6901 Před rokem +14

      Is this a subtle Rick Roll

  • @jeffgoode9865
    @jeffgoode9865 Před měsícem +2

    As soon as you played the chird progression, in the first 10 seconds, i thought
    "If you're lost and you look, then you will find me! Time after time!"

  • @mycharacterisamenace-qu4zx
    @mycharacterisamenace-qu4zx Před 4 měsíci +1

    great video! love how you took the opportunity to rickroll not once but twice haha. i live in japan and i hear these chords quite frequently

  • @ikamfuey
    @ikamfuey Před rokem +676

    This progression always felt like a beautiful story unraveling itself, powering through,blossoming and leaving this nostalgic feeling that keeps you coming back, subconsciously having your mind returning and/or gravitating towards music similar to it.

    • @1Holbytla
      @1Holbytla Před rokem +8

      Wow. Yes! Very beautifully worded. 😊

  • @Leo-tl4fd
    @Leo-tl4fd Před rokem +164

    plastic love does use this chord progression too (replaces IV with ii, like rick astley). I'm suprised not much people mention this when its one of the most internet popular examples. It is also curious how the lyrics goes like "plastic beat, plastic love" like the composer was aware of the chord progression being the easy way

    • @kaydubsthekoifish
      @kaydubsthekoifish Před rokem +1

      I knew it sounded similar!
      Plus it does have this melodramatic feeling to it as well, so it fits.

    • @MaxAires
      @MaxAires Před rokem

      yeah I was waiting for David to mention it

    • @BasilLevski
      @BasilLevski Před rokem

      ye ii instead of IV and V7b9 instead of V which adds some crunch - really boring tune without that added flavour

    • @Leo-tl4fd
      @Leo-tl4fd Před rokem +3

      @@BasilLevski i agree, seems like the composer knows where to add flavor and where to keep it straight. The final result is very magical music, 80s musicians were so good at that..

    • @skytheguy0438
      @skytheguy0438 Před rokem

      plastic love was one of the first things I thought of

  • @hammayunayub8026
    @hammayunayub8026 Před dnem

    Thats the channel I have been looking for.

  • @jalendouglas5584
    @jalendouglas5584 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This video pop up on my feed very interesting. This was definitely a great video to watch and the outro was beautiful 8:55

  • @maxpower892
    @maxpower892 Před rokem +180

    Got Rick rolled so beautifully i'm not even mad. Great stuff, as always.

  • @danidonadi
    @danidonadi Před rokem +537

    I find Japanese Pop/Rock music more similar in chord progressions and melodies to European Pop/Rock (EuroPop) and 70's 80's UK Pop/Rock, with diatonic melodies inspired by Classical music, whereas US Pop/Rock as well as K-Pop music is highly pentatonic based (Blues scales). On a side note, I find Japanese musicians to be a lot more educated in music theory than we are in the West.

    • @ivansoto9723
      @ivansoto9723 Před rokem +68

      Japanese seem more educated in music theory to the point that those who don't have a great understanding of it still seem to of absorbed it by osmosis lol.
      It sounds kind of like a contradiction, but the first tools we have are our ears and it's easier to create something you've heard your entire life.
      I say this from studying my favorite composers and reading interviews with them too

    • @TaniaMix89
      @TaniaMix89 Před rokem +1

      Agree

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem +17

      Maybe this is why I like Japanese music (anime, videogames) so much, it has a lot more melody and diatonic scales compared to... Rap or whatever the west are into these days

    • @joneatsbagels7239
      @joneatsbagels7239 Před rokem +19

      @@YounesLayachi you sound so cool saying that

    • @khbgkh
      @khbgkh Před rokem +4

      @@YounesLayachi agree with previous commenter. Much cool, very impressive.

  • @aofede634
    @aofede634 Před měsícem +1

    as i heard the chord progression the only song that came to my mind was together forever. im glad you put it in as well

  • @edbed59
    @edbed59 Před měsícem +2

    Fascinating

  • @TheMemeMachineNowInHD
    @TheMemeMachineNowInHD Před rokem +429

    From what I understand, this chord progression comes from the way the Japanese non-pentatonic scale developed before western music introduced the chromatic scale. There's a video essay on why Joe Hiashi's music is so good that explains it very well

    • @cafecombaunilha
      @cafecombaunilha Před rokem +6

      could you link the video essay here, please? got me curious

    • @TheMemeMachineNowInHD
      @TheMemeMachineNowInHD Před rokem +21

      @@cafecombaunilha czcams.com/video/hQ9wt3sxpwk/video.html the original essay was by Sideways, who does a bunch of other interesting music analysis (including a fantastic one on why the 2017 CATS is a TRAVESTY)

    • @joy7367
      @joy7367 Před rokem +1

      what's the non-pentatonic scale? is it all scales that are not the pentatonic scale?

    • @TheMemeMachineNowInHD
      @TheMemeMachineNowInHD Před rokem +23

      @@joy7367 I meant it as like. It's almost a pentatonic scale but it doesn't quite match up with how the west defines a pentatonic scale; it's still the five notes, but with a slight difference in a select few intervals

    • @thepulseman7154
      @thepulseman7154 Před rokem

      @@TheMemeMachineNowInHD If I had to guess, starting from C:
      The pentatonic scale we tend to refer to in the West: C, D, E, G, A.
      The one you may be talking about: C, D, E-Flat, G, A.
      Of course I'm not quite an expert and it seems too easy, but at least that one sounds familiar to me, especially transposed a tone higher (D, E, F, A, B), for example if you are familiar with Mai Shiranui's original theme in Fatal Fury 2, they are literally the first notes played by the flute.

  • @JadeCordova
    @JadeCordova Před rokem +1203

    Bowser's Peaches song mainly uses this chord progression!!!!
    Also, the IV-V-iii-vi is a very very common sequence in Filipino songs but with an added ii-V-I-(I7 if repeating) to the original "Royal Road" progression.

    • @johnp4887
      @johnp4887 Před rokem +18

      dude i heard the peaches too lol

    • @ThePi314Man
      @ThePi314Man Před 11 měsíci +30

      It's a great reference to Japanese music structure.

    • @saintient
      @saintient Před 10 měsíci +30

      A lot of popular old filipino songs are straight up plagiarized japanese songs. There's a compilation in youtube, you can look it up. I was so surprised myself

    • @nathansiapno5966
      @nathansiapno5966 Před 10 měsíci +6

      Peaches peaches peaches peaches peaches peaches peaches... i love youuuu

    • @handy_jack118
      @handy_jack118 Před 10 měsíci +7

      because its based off of the rick roll . so peaches is rick rolling you ( this was intended by the writer )

  • @zillavale
    @zillavale Před 3 měsíci +1

    Wowww this is sooo interesting. Blown my mind. I have a whole new perspective now

  • @_Pauper_
    @_Pauper_ Před měsícem

    Thank you for this .

  • @Just-Michael
    @Just-Michael Před rokem +247

    After listening to J-Pop for the past 8 years (oh god, has it been that long?), I can confirm that this progression is absolutely everywhere. Even if it's not the main chord progression, they'll jam it in somewhere. At least in the style that I like, that is. XD

  • @ralfklonowski3740
    @ralfklonowski3740 Před rokem +678

    "Time after Time" by Cindy Lauper comes to mind.
    As always an excellent breakdown. Thank you!

    • @hacerclic1020
      @hacerclic1020 Před rokem +74

      Yes, that's the first one that came to my mind also. But I looked up the chord chart and it's almost, but not quite. Time After Time is actually IV V iii IV-only one note different.

    • @nstrug
      @nstrug Před rokem +9

      That’s exactly what I thought of too.

    • @sourisvoleur4854
      @sourisvoleur4854 Před rokem +7

      Thank you! It was gnawing at my brain and I just couldn't remember what it went to.

    • @Guavauava
      @Guavauava Před rokem +4

      First thing that came to mind!

    • @NegativeReferral
      @NegativeReferral Před rokem +37

      A ton of Western 70s/80s hits use subtle variations on these progressions. Examples include Material Girl, Bizarre Love Triangle, and September.

  • @venusasaboy
    @venusasaboy Před 11 měsíci +10

    I love the version Silk Sonic and one of the JP examples use with the V chord in 3rd inversion/7th as the root. Has a really nice line in the bass and sounds a bit richer overall.

  • @antares_the
    @antares_the Před 5 měsíci +1

    I just learned something today. Thanks!

  • @ultrapower111
    @ultrapower111 Před rokem +519

    Please more vids on modern Japanese chord progressions. It's awesome!

    • @kavunyaka
      @kavunyaka Před rokem +4

      +++++

    • @gadgetlab7
      @gadgetlab7 Před rokem +33

      just japanese music in general would be cool

    • @david_djent
      @david_djent Před rokem +11

      Just take the vi and make it a VI. They do a lot of mixolydian too! That’s a very modern take

    • @thisenable
      @thisenable Před rokem +12

      if you wanna hear more while we wait , Gavin Leeper's channel has had some great videos about Japanese chord progressions. Truly awesome stuff as much as they're emotional/nostalgic/melancholic. Just glad to see more jp chord progression coverage

    • @2m7b5
      @2m7b5 Před rokem +9

      Korean too. A lot of people love to hate Kpop, but Kpop harmony can be pretty interesting.

  • @cantbehelped
    @cantbehelped Před rokem +84

    Came for Japanese chord progression songs, got Rickrolled, instantly thought of Robo's Theme from Chrono Trigger. Great video

    • @shinekitten7669
      @shinekitten7669 Před rokem +3

      YES i rickrolled my family with robo's theme once haha

    • @sye990
      @sye990 Před rokem

      I was hoping someone had mentioned Mitsuda's composition for Robo's theme

  • @bayonetta5101
    @bayonetta5101 Před 4 měsíci +1

    no wonder i love japans music so much. definitely gonna use this "core" for my music searches now

  • @PurpleIsBored
    @PurpleIsBored Před 9 měsíci

    discovered your channel, subscribed, thanks for great content!

  • @cofftps67yago94
    @cofftps67yago94 Před rokem +296

    3:26 this is a very interesting and simple concept man. Every musician should remember and use it 🤯🤯🤯

  • @magnusemeritus
    @magnusemeritus Před rokem +480

    First song that came to mind when I heard this progression was Time After Time by Cyndi Lauper. Beautiful song. Beautiful chord progression.

    • @pedrocarvalho4999
      @pedrocarvalho4999 Před rokem +7

      Also "Being Boring", by the Pet Shop Boys.

    • @Coyote27981
      @Coyote27981 Před rokem +12

      Thought the same... Age is showing 😂

    • @Musnud
      @Musnud Před rokem +18

      Thank you! I KNEW there was another song that almost instantly sounded like to me, but I couldn't place it after he played so many other examples! "Time After Time" was it!

    • @yesyouam
      @yesyouam Před rokem

      YES! That track is my Jam! Thanks for pointing that out!

    • @SybilNix
      @SybilNix Před 11 měsíci +7

      I was shocked it wasn’t included in the set of examples!!

  • @92Simon
    @92Simon Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you great video

  • @MyNameisSung
    @MyNameisSung Před 27 dny

    So awesome now I can go to the space with this knowledge ❤

  • @EBjeebies1081
    @EBjeebies1081 Před rokem +448

    I personally love it when this progression has a major 3 chord instead of a minor. Gives it an intoxicatingly melancholic feeling

    • @otavionunes5396
      @otavionunes5396 Před 11 měsíci +17

      Feels like almost home

    • @twit6973
      @twit6973 Před 9 měsíci +7

      i love ii9 V6 III IV

    • @stupidfuckingjunkie
      @stupidfuckingjunkie Před 9 měsíci +5

      major 3 goes hard i cant lie

    • @MrKynzer
      @MrKynzer Před 9 měsíci

      Any examples please?

    • @mint.f2060
      @mint.f2060 Před 7 měsíci +15

      From music theory perspective, if the minor iii is replaced with major III, the progression actually becomes a minor progression in its relative minor. The vi would become I and the "modal mixture III" would be V. So the chord progression would then be actually VI - VII - V - i. Personally, this chord progression is less interesting than the Royal Progression because the Royal progression uses iii chord in a major key, which is a less often used chord in traditional western tonal music.

  • @user-cj4fu8qq9b
    @user-cj4fu8qq9b Před rokem +27

    3:26 this part is really useful im gonna make a song using this

  • @mihchin
    @mihchin Před 7 měsíci +2

    love this

  • @wilhammartins9898
    @wilhammartins9898 Před měsícem +1

    I've always said that Japan has this feeling of ... melancholy. Like a sweet kind of sadness, the good type. I can list a variety of reasons for that, but Japan indeed has IT.

  • @lucidsister
    @lucidsister Před rokem +80

    IMO it’s popular in Japan because it translates well from their traditional instruments (like the koto) into modern instruments from the West. So that sentiment/affinity is deeply rooted in history

  • @mmilcz833
    @mmilcz833 Před rokem +152

    I guess this is one of the things that I really love about Japanese music, it feels playful but also nostalgic at the same time. The examples gave me chills, it feels so familiar even when it’s not.

    • @FlexLex
      @FlexLex Před rokem +13

      That's a really good way to put it. I don't know why I enjoy Japanese pop music so much, but when I hear it, it just feels somehow familiar even though I might not know the song.
      Like that last song he played in the outro. I have no idea what it was. But it brought back those warm memories of childhood.

  • @BusCrashBoy
    @BusCrashBoy Před 8 měsíci

    Really fascinating video, very well explained to someone like me who doesn't know the first thing about music. I'll be keeping an ear out for this when I watch anime from now on...

  • @blakeunboxes
    @blakeunboxes Před měsícem

    Great video essay. I never could put to words why anime music all had the same meloncolic yet joyish tone, but now I do! Appreciated!

  • @dimiaraujo90
    @dimiaraujo90 Před rokem +68

    I always called it: "the Bizarre Love Triangle chord progression", never noticed it appears so much in Japanese music

    • @mtg6792
      @mtg6792 Před rokem

      That one isn't quite the same. Goes to the IV instead of the VI

    • @dimiaraujo90
      @dimiaraujo90 Před rokem

      @@mtg6792
      It's
      IV V iii vi
      It has both chords, lol

  • @jacksonsay37
    @jacksonsay37 Před rokem +337

    Another Western example of a song that uses this progression is "Knowing Me, Knowing You" by ABBA. Which was actually what I immediately thought of when I heard the progression.

    • @althealligator1467
      @althealligator1467 Před rokem +28

      I thought of that bit in Time After Time

    • @DaniloSilva-pl3sq
      @DaniloSilva-pl3sq Před rokem +4

      I thought about Not The One by RHCP's new album

    • @cervgiovanni
      @cervgiovanni Před rokem

      And that song catches on

    • @karlnord1429
      @karlnord1429 Před rokem +4

      @@althealligator1467 That one is very similar, but a little different. In Cmajor the "Japanese version" is F G Emin Amin, whereas the intro to "Time After Time" is F G Emin F. So only one chord different. However, it is important to note that we still get the feeling of a wandering between subdominant and dominants. Eventually "Time after Time" resolves to C in the chorus.

    • @magentasky234
      @magentasky234 Před rokem +2

      I love that song so much

  • @CsMsLady80
    @CsMsLady80 Před 11 měsíci +14

    3:20 OH NO RICKROLL

  • @Slipping_thru_the_Seams
    @Slipping_thru_the_Seams Před 3 měsíci

    cool video thanks!!

  • @khaansulu5695
    @khaansulu5695 Před rokem +35

    I always thought of the chord progression as 'Things seem dark but there's always a glimmer of hope"

  • @charlesblasini2134
    @charlesblasini2134 Před rokem +47

    As someone whose played music for Hispanic churches for several years, this chord progression is very very very common in music from the 80s and 90s

  • @unaminggaming
    @unaminggaming Před 3 měsíci

    You play the piano wonderfully!