The 'NEAPOLITAN 6' chord, EXPLAINED

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
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    DESCRIPTION:
    The Neapolitan chord is a very popular harmony used in various genres. In this video I aimed to explain this rather simple concept in full depth; hopefully this is understandable to musicians and non-musicians/music lovers. probably not :)
    Hopefully you will learn something in this video :)
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    General & Business email: creativelyexplained@gmail.com
    Credits:
    All images and video are licensed under Creative Commons or were purchased and licensed for commercial use in this video.
    All featured material is in the public domain.
    © Creatively eXplained all rights reserved, 2018

Komentáře • 125

  • @Zavendea
    @Zavendea Před 5 lety +267

    Hearing the composers’ names pronounced correctly was music to my ears

  • @Incolent
    @Incolent Před 4 lety +92

    That moment when youtuber explains N6 chord better than almost all theory teacher ive had past 20 years.

    • @CharlesFerraro
      @CharlesFerraro Před 2 lety +6

      That’s honestly not a surprise and it would be dishonest to claim otherwise. The teachers you had growing up had fewer sources. They were also the only sources YOU had available. Of course with the Internet and CZcams, great sources are pushed to the top by the algorithm. So you’re getting the cream of the crop out of potentially thousands of teachers.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před 9 měsíci

      I just read about it in a book, and it made perfect sense - as I was already grounded in 'Classical Theory' anyway (which I also learned just by reading a book - it's really not that hard to understand). So, I didn't need anybody to teach me it. But, I never liked using the N6 chord though - it was so overused as to beocme a cliché.

  • @MsJocelynC
    @MsJocelynC Před 4 lety +81

    “...because voice leading.” That’s all of music theory, in one, succinct phrase.

    • @iiGORO333
      @iiGORO333 Před 3 lety +1

      You know what, that ain't wrong.

  • @loganfeecemusic
    @loganfeecemusic Před 4 lety +44

    I wish more people that attempted to explain music theory concepts in a video format did it as well as you. Amazing stuff

  • @YannisFyssas
    @YannisFyssas Před 4 lety +18

    Fantastic ! *THANK YOU* (proceeds to write songs with stacked n6 CHORDS)

  • @dibaliba
    @dibaliba Před 4 lety +13

    This is the best explanation about N6 chord that I have ever seen.

  • @MusicLover-oe3ig
    @MusicLover-oe3ig Před 2 lety +1

    This is the best video in demystifying Neapolitan Chord on CZcams by far: why it was named, excepts how composers used it and how it is constructed. Pictures worth a thousand words, thank you very very much!!

  • @stepanpribyl3561
    @stepanpribyl3561 Před 5 lety +14

    I love the recap section! Wow! Thank you for that, it is so easy to remember like that :)

  • @comet1072
    @comet1072 Před 5 lety +28

    Very nice! It was a bit hard to follow from time to time, but the overall effect was very good, and you gave some excellent examples. I can barely imagine the time you put into this, keep it up!

  • @igniss777
    @igniss777 Před 5 lety +8

    Man I love you for this. Brilliant editing

  • @gabrielcadiz2394
    @gabrielcadiz2394 Před 5 lety +5

    The Indiana Jones theme played is a 4th higher than the sheet music. The sheet is in C major, the actual audio is in F. (for those trying to follow along on instruments)

    • @alifmuhammadchicago
      @alifmuhammadchicago Před 3 lety

      That's nothing. The end isn't even the final notes of the sound clip. Hehe. But now we're just quibbling.

  • @CarinaPrimaBallerina
    @CarinaPrimaBallerina Před 2 lety

    The neapolitan in Bethoven's adagio from piano sonata no. 14 is so brilliantly put that I almost break down every time I hear it. It's so strong, stirring and mercilessly gloomy. Just beautiful!!

  • @1827641
    @1827641 Před 5 lety +8

    Just the kind of videos I have been looking for so long! I find it excellent because of the following points:
    -It's not about those basic topics so many videos show, but about less known and more advanced ones.
    -You illustrate the theory with examples, both classical and current, giving even the historical background.
    -It is not a mere academic exercise of musical analysis: you show how to use it, in addition to how it has been used.
    -The concepts are explained in a very understandable and entertaining way :)
    -And, finally, you don't simply expose the rules, but you also justify them explaining their raison d'être.
    Hope this is only the beginning of a long series of videos. Congratulations.

  • @avsabulis
    @avsabulis Před 4 lety +2

    that was a neapolitan explanation. you resolved my understanding quite nicely

  • @louisapeng1170
    @louisapeng1170 Před 4 lety

    You're such a great teacher! Thank you so much for sharing this video.

  • @tomhofmeister3246
    @tomhofmeister3246 Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much! I took a break from college and desperately need refreshers and explinations like this.

  • @LonaDVidrio
    @LonaDVidrio Před 4 lety

    Great content, brief and well explained and a touch of history. Thank you!

  • @sotirisgeorgiou
    @sotirisgeorgiou Před 5 lety +5

    Really cool video, exactly what I needed before going to take my exams

  • @bm8584
    @bm8584 Před 4 lety +1

    Great explanation! I loved the reference of Capricho Árabe from Francisco Tárrega.

  • @beatrizdemello5370
    @beatrizdemello5370 Před 2 měsíci

    Love this! Will share it with students…

  • @christopherbarker5016
    @christopherbarker5016 Před rokem +1

    I've always thought there is more to the Neapolitan 6th than this. I believe it is the tritone substitution of the dominant (5th) chord, watered down by removing the 7th; that it wasn’t structurally understood in its era; and that after going out of fashion in the 18th century, it was rediscovered - in its true form as the tritone substitution of V7 - in jazz music in the 1940s!
    Classically, the Neapolitan Sixth is the first inversion of the flattened supertonic. It most often progressed to the second inversion of the tonic, and then to V7 and I.
    But I don't find that any of this description explains why the chord works at all.
    I like to think the reason the Neapolitan Sixth works is that it’s the tritone substitution of the dominant (chord V). A tritone substitution takes one 7 chord (a major triad with flattened 7th) and replaces it with the one that’s a tritone - that's three tritones, 6 semitones or half an octave - above it. Tritone substitutions work because the two notes that primarily define any chord - their 3rd and 7th notes - are shared between any given 7 chord and its tritone substitute.
    For example, in the key of C, the dominant chord (chord V) is G7: G, B, D and F. The two notes that primarily define a chord's character are its 3rd and its 7th: in this case, the B (defining major) and the F (the minor 7th) on the G chord.
    A tritone above or below G is Db, so G7’s tritone substitution is Db7: Db, F, Ab and Cb (= B). The two notes that primarily define the character of this chord, its 3rd and its 7th, are F (defining major) and Cb (the minor 7th)… wait, that’s the same two notes, F and B!
    That’s why substituting a 7 chord with its tritone substitution still feels enough like the original chord, while having a really cool effect. It works in all sorts of combinations of I-V-I, replacing either the initial chord I or chord V with their tritone substitutions. It’s also why Dm7 - Db7 - C works: that second chord is the tritone substitution of G7, giving a standard ii - V - I progression but with a more harmonically complex second chord.
    So it seems to me that what’s really going on with the Neapolitan Sixth is that it’s fundamentally the ubiquitous cadence of the time (V - I [second inversion] - V7 - I), but dressing up the first of those four chords with its tritone substitution. That first V chord (G) is replaced by its tritone substitution (Db7).
    But even a century ago, we didn’t understand enough about harmonic theory to know that that’s what the chord structurally was. So it was called a 'sixth', after the interval between that first inversion and its tonic (F and the Db above it, in the key of C), and added to the lexicon of other 'sixths' or first inversions (the German 6th, the Italian 6th, the French 6th).
    If we understand the Neapolitan Sixth to be what I believe it structurally is - a tritone substitution of the dominant 7th chord - I think we understand why it always worked. 17th and 18th century composers omitted its 7th (the B or Cb on that Db chord in the key of C) just because to include a 7th would have felt unnatural - even sacrilegiously unsubtle - at the time. And they always used the chord in its first inversion, because doing so provided the bass line they were used to hearing: IV - V - V - I.

  • @JaredPlane
    @JaredPlane Před 5 lety +2

    How do you only have 8000 subscribers?!?!?!? Brilliant video! Thanks. :)

  • @alexanderpols761
    @alexanderpols761 Před 5 lety +15

    love your vids, could you do some more like videos for beginners who wanna get into composing, but like not complete beginners at piano ive played for 2 years its just all the technical stuff can be confusing

  • @geezby9958
    @geezby9958 Před 2 lety

    I chuckled every time the Napoli football club’s crest replaced the N symbol in the sheet music examples. Nice touch! 👍

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Před 5 lety +6

    Really great video, and edited very well too! You deserve more subscribers!

  • @seattlevkk
    @seattlevkk Před 2 lety

    What an excellent video! Thanks

  • @juliansolo1825
    @juliansolo1825 Před 4 lety +1

    Very nice and well done explanation. Thank you very much!
    You should do a video on the "Tierce Picarde" too !

  • @tristaanabel
    @tristaanabel Před 3 lety

    This explained it so well!

  • @1827641
    @1827641 Před 4 lety +10

    Could you make a video about the augmented sixth chords (Italian, French, and German)?

  • @bennygblues
    @bennygblues Před 5 lety +4

    “Do not stress the augmented 2nd interval unless you want to sound Middle Eastern mode” is surely the best name for the harmonic minor scale. Love the vid! Funny and educational!

  • @ryanjamesritzes6304
    @ryanjamesritzes6304 Před 3 lety

    thanks so much. I didn't understand when my professor taught it but now i get it more so thank you

  • @djzottel9259
    @djzottel9259 Před 5 lety +4

    awesome video!

  • @mikaschmidt2110
    @mikaschmidt2110 Před 2 lety

    I have been trying to find a good explanation for a while now, and I finally found it.

  • @2jazzen
    @2jazzen Před 5 lety +1

    Great video!!

  • @sunnyjim1355
    @sunnyjim1355 Před 9 měsíci

    4:00 I must admit... I'm very impressed that you used Tárrega's Capricho árabe as an example here. Very impressed indeed. 👏 👏 👏

  • @GlaceonStudios
    @GlaceonStudios Před 7 měsíci

    I think one of the most famous examples to me is in Beethoven's Eroica symphony in Eb major, where in the middle of the development there is an outburst of rage where the progression goes G-C-FM7 (the famous chord with the minor second dissonance), which would normally lead to a Bb7-Eb cadence, but instead turns out to be a deceptive Neapolitan chord for a new theme in E minor.

  • @curtpiazza1688
    @curtpiazza1688 Před 2 lety

    Great explanation!

  • @Nobody-yx8og
    @Nobody-yx8og Před 3 měsíci

    Well, thank you. It actually helped

  • @MaestroIsraelCardoso
    @MaestroIsraelCardoso Před 5 lety +1

    Perfect!!!!!

  • @Daniel90802
    @Daniel90802 Před 3 lety

    Best explanation found!

  • @v.j.geraldjames2825
    @v.j.geraldjames2825 Před 5 lety +2

    Very nice

  • @DrChaad
    @DrChaad Před 2 lety +1

    I thought I understood it until I watched this video. Maybe if I watch it 50 more times, it will come back to me.

  • @Kazemijazi
    @Kazemijazi Před 5 lety +2

    I'm your 10.000th subscriber! 😀

  • @DizzyKrissi
    @DizzyKrissi Před 5 lety +2

    wow - it could not be any better than this - I wonder how long it takes you to edit videos like this.

  • @SilloniusAeldarian
    @SilloniusAeldarian Před 4 lety +1

    Its just 4 seconds and i already laughing lol. All your video makes learnin music soooo fun!

  • @EliiBarbosa4
    @EliiBarbosa4 Před rokem +1

    Muito bom !

  • @885909431427
    @885909431427 Před 4 lety

    Great vid! thanks vm - you have a new subscriber

  • @MrMikomi
    @MrMikomi Před 2 lety

    Great!!!

  • @ciro90ish
    @ciro90ish Před 5 lety +1

    ottimo video!

  • @giorgiomariomartino2419
    @giorgiomariomartino2419 Před 4 měsíci

    You made a really great explanation! Neapolitan scale has been used even in italian and especially neapolitan popular music. You wrote that that chord in the neapolitan major scale gives you anxiety? As a southern italian and having lived in Naples i should say that the neapolitan music is romantic,emotional, exciting, sometimes dramatic but it never gives anxiety! I'm kidding, my best congratulations for this interesting video!

  • @Jedlmind
    @Jedlmind Před 4 lety +1

    Gold

  • @najibpeligroso8734
    @najibpeligroso8734 Před 3 lety

    Good explanation

  • @sasongs
    @sasongs Před 2 lety

    I had to slow down this video. great info thanks

  • @felipexis010
    @felipexis010 Před 3 lety

    You just saved me from an exam I have this week, thank you!

  • @user-tx2jv6iw9f
    @user-tx2jv6iw9f Před 3 lety

    Can you suggest the literature where I can find this cord in the pieces of composer (basically since Beethoven to Schönberg-Debussy era)?

  • @bill3837
    @bill3837 Před 3 lety

    thats nice

  • @LCRLive687
    @LCRLive687 Před rokem

    So if we are in a different modal root in the same key signature where this Neapolitan chord rests on a different degree - say the 3rd mode of major (pulled back 4 degrees from the minor example) which is Phrygian, does this still work like that?
    And 2) if we are to understand this as an out of key or out of scale chord then is there a second possibility somewhere in the scale so that we can have another flavor? I hear that it is the practice (back in the minor mode example) of creating a dominant 7 chord at the 6 degree.
    Well then we nicely have three flavors of a neopolitan ice cream stack?
    And I hear there is other stuff one can do to modulate out of key like augmented 6 chords and stuff.
    A 4 flavor Neapolitan ice cream perhaps would get another name. Maybe cosmopolitan.

  • @billligon4005
    @billligon4005 Před 4 lety

    Trying to understand chords in Classical music. How do I start that process (how do chords Progress)??

  • @nickschmitt8594
    @nickschmitt8594 Před 4 lety +7

    You are a monster. I mean this in a good way.

  • @Vextrove
    @Vextrove Před 3 lety +1

    What's that image at 0:04?

  • @ynnadssom
    @ynnadssom Před 4 měsíci

    Is Chopin's introduction to his nocturne in C#m an example of the Neapolitan?

  • @echud1567
    @echud1567 Před 2 lety

    I was more looking for how the Neapolitan can be tonicized in part writing. I am guessing it’s the same as tonicizing any regular chord but I am unsure. Regardless this helped me to understand the concept a little more.

  • @SteveRayDarrell
    @SteveRayDarrell Před 4 lety +1

    How did you pronounce those names that well? Are you Italian?

  • @malicrnjo3234
    @malicrnjo3234 Před 5 lety

    Isnt N6 a first inversion of the VII chord in a minor scale with a flat 2nd? Atleast my proffesor told me that

  • @FeOfTheElement
    @FeOfTheElement Před 4 lety

    I always find it funny how daunting certain names for musical terms are until they are broken down like this, where you have made it rather simple!

  • @MananAdhvaryu97
    @MananAdhvaryu97 Před 5 lety +2

    More music theory videos please

  • @oneeyemonster3262
    @oneeyemonster3262 Před 5 lety

    You Can do this from A minor ( using the A melodic min b2)
    A min D min E min F# 7 into B min ( or B b, D, F# Augmented into B minor)
    The F# aeo b5 is now the F# b4, b5....you can play it as dominant , diminished or AUG.
    When you're in B Minor..simply play the (N6) again...as in b2 of B min or CMaj7 to A minor.
    it's nice and smooth
    But it'll be the same movements in reverse...if you went from
    A min Bb2 down to G min...
    Then all you have to do is play to go back UP
    G min C min D min E7 into A min ...again.
    You can also play . The term PRE DOMINANT is going to HELP you.
    as LYDIAN or ION Maj7
    Bb Lydian to F MAJOR
    Bb Lydian DOMINANT C7 mix b6 into F Minor
    Lydian b3 C7 mix b2 into F Harmonic MAJOR
    Lydian #2 C# loc b4, bb7 into D Harmonic minor
    ( you can play the lydian #2 as maj7 , min or full deminished)
    You can simply play E7 as D double harmonic min to get back into A minor
    The trick is the E7 into A MAJOR or min..then you'll sort of see as b2 of A Ionian.
    Bb aeo b5 C loc 4 into C# melodic min/ E MAJOR
    C# min ( N6) D7 E7 back into A melodic min...ect

  • @adelbordbari9416
    @adelbordbari9416 Před 3 lety

    does Pink Floyd's breathe! _is all your life will ever be_ , 2:02-2:05 count?

  • @nathanaelhahn4795
    @nathanaelhahn4795 Před 3 lety

    2:55 This is the driest humor and I love it

  • @erospalombini7103
    @erospalombini7103 Před 2 lety

    @Created eXplained
    When you was playing on the piano in the beginning it sounded exactly like the intro of the song
    "Could It Be Magic" by
    Barry Manilow.
    Me personally i like Doug Church
    version a lot more.
    He's probably the anyone whoever came close to singing like
    Elvis Presley in the early 1970s.
    I definitely know and guarantee you like Barry Manilow because why would you play the begining of that song intro out of nowhere?

  • @sweetygoyal4603
    @sweetygoyal4603 Před 5 lety +1

    It is flatterned 2 chord then how can be it sub dominant????
    And where to use it as in bach chorale the chord progression is chord2(minor) 5th and 1st.
    What about minor key is it like N6 ,5 and 1

    • @NotLegato
      @NotLegato Před 5 lety

      it's a predominant function, it's not a subdominant chord, however. "subdominant" refers to being built off of the note before the fifth, predominant refers to the function.
      this is why ii in major is a predominant in function, but supertonic in position.

  • @Lubawaandme
    @Lubawaandme Před rokem

    Я ПЛАКАЛ. ГАЛАКТИЧЕСКИ. ДУШЕРАЗДИРАЮЩЕ. НЕВЕРОЯТНО.

  • @annemeson7820
    @annemeson7820 Před 3 lety

    I study music theory on Spain and I al confused with the term predominant chord and subdominant chord.are they the same chord with two different names?

    • @CreativelyeXplained
      @CreativelyeXplained  Před 3 lety +1

      Subdominant is a specific function in a major key tonality. Pre-dominant is whatever chord points to the Dominant (the V7 usually), which includes the Subdominant chords. Makes sense?

    • @annemeson7820
      @annemeson7820 Před 3 lety

      In Major key ok.i understand that it's the 4rth grade...but un minor then It could be any grade that leads to a V7..?

    • @CreativelyeXplained
      @CreativelyeXplained  Před 3 lety +1

      In major and in minor it is generally agreed that the 2nd and 4th degree chords are in the subdominant family (and are hence also pre-dominant chords).

  • @ambotak99
    @ambotak99 Před 5 lety +2

    I wanted to study music but it's just too expensive. :'( So i decides to maybe just self-study since it is my passion. Do you know any books or pdf about music theory wich i can download and study? Thank you so much.

    • @TobyHonest420
      @TobyHonest420 Před 5 lety +1

      Start doing Solfage (you could find many exercises in Pozzoli's books), then study Piston's "Harmony", one of the best books you can find out there.
      Also studying music is not that expensive. If theory and composition is what you're after you could easily tale just one lesson every week (which would be 15 to 25$ in most cases). You can study theory and harmony by yourself, but you should still see teachers as long as you're still doing solfage (it is easy not to notice mistakes, you REALLY need someone to check on you every once in a while).

    • @ambotak99
      @ambotak99 Před 5 lety

      @@TobyHonest420 i learned a little bit of music theory because i used to play piano in the seminary when I was a seminarian. But I only know about scaling and making chords. (Though I know it's very little knowledge) I just realized that a teacher is important for a more systematic way of learning and music school here in the Philippines is really expensive. One semester is worth 2 years of my course right now. :(

    • @ambotak99
      @ambotak99 Před 5 lety

      @@TobyHonest420 Anyways thank you so much for the help and suggestion. I really need it. I appreciate it. Thanks a lot!

  • @albinyngvesson1263
    @albinyngvesson1263 Před 5 měsíci

    lol, im composing in Gm right now and trying out the neapolitan chord

  • @skep9013
    @skep9013 Před 5 lety +4

    Are you italian? Pronunci perfettamente i nomi italiani...complimenti per il canale ciaooo

  • @namnguyen7153
    @namnguyen7153 Před 4 lety +1

    Your videos are great! Can you make a video about basic music theory for beginners?

    • @CreativelyeXplained
      @CreativelyeXplained  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! My video on Harmonic Functions is an attempt at a more basic concept :) hope I didn’t make that one too complicated but check it out

  • @shubhamdash6519
    @shubhamdash6519 Před 4 lety

    The video and information is great...just slow down a bit maybe...give a few pauses to let every new piece of information sink in with the viewer/listener..

  • @Umitto
    @Umitto Před 4 lety

    Please activate ADD TRANSLATION function your videos if dont mind.

  • @mattforking
    @mattforking Před 4 lety

    you are hilarious and Iove you

  • @fuzzylightning
    @fuzzylightning Před 10 měsíci +1

    why does music have to be such a science project?

  • @arataka57
    @arataka57 Před 4 lety +2

    Isn't it called "Neopolitan"?

  • @oguzalpcim4771
    @oguzalpcim4771 Před 4 lety

    Yeah Im gonna spam N6 chord for a week now

  • @franciscoaragao5398
    @franciscoaragao5398 Před 2 lety

    Why so fast?

  • @davidbakke9293
    @davidbakke9293 Před 3 lety

    Me after thinking I made a new chord: years of academy training wasted

  • @tjfry6873
    @tjfry6873 Před 3 lety

    2:59 lmaoo

  • @TMAtritone
    @TMAtritone Před 3 lety

    The N is not in first inversion

  • @Ice-dy6fi
    @Ice-dy6fi Před 2 lety

    4:28 Nadie entiende al Ab :(

  • @junting605
    @junting605 Před 4 lety +2

    Don’t get it...

  • @sorrychangedmyusername3594

    Reminder to not confuse Bass Inversions with actual chords from their diatonics. I failed super badly.

  • @irProteus
    @irProteus Před 3 lety

    At 1:05+ into your video, , you present a scale- G-A-Bb-C-D-Eb-F-G -that you call - G-min.…. HUH?
    Just which G-minor scale are you attempting to present ? Is this a new one ? or a very old one ????
    Would that be the G-Melodic Minor scale that has two flats - Bb & Eb …. ? You have even placed an extraneous flat symbol in front of the B and the E on the staff.
    However, all of my text books show that the G-Melodic Minor has a Natural sign in front of the E and ALSO has a Sharp before the F … neither of which are shown in your illustration.
    Perhaps you are showing the G-Harmonic Minor scale, which also has two flats- Bb & Eb - in its signature, excluding the Natural before the E.... but including the Sharp symbol before the F.
    The Aeolian mode of the G scale also has the two flats, but not the Sharp in front of the F; while the G-Dorian scale has but one flat..... Bb
    So, pray tell, which of the G-Minor scales were you attempting to portray ?
    Or could it be that my mind has slipped a couple of cogs ???

    • @CreativelyeXplained
      @CreativelyeXplained  Před 3 lety

      G A Bb C D Eb F G is the G natural minor or G Aeolian scale, which is definitely different than the G Dorian, Harmonic Minor and Melodic Minor (both traditional and jazz).
      I’m afraid you must’ve confused something

    • @irProteus
      @irProteus Před 3 lety

      Thank you for your clarification. I was taught.... and think of the minor scale as the Major scale with a lowered 3rd. i.e.. the Harmonic Minor). I would believe that most music students, when they think of the minor scale... think of it in that form (some authors refer to it as the ' minor' … and not the Aeolian or Melodic Minor or other modes related thereto. Ergo, that you chose to use a lesser common - or a particular mode - might have been more informational had you introduced the G minor scale as - "the G Aeolian minor scale". Would have helped with "clarity of explication".
      Again I thank you as it has given me an opportunity -albeit a much needed one- to increase my meager musical theory knowledge.

    • @CreativelyeXplained
      @CreativelyeXplained  Před 3 lety

      I don’t agree, the G natural minor scale (which happens to be the same as the aeolian mode) is the related minor of a major scale (Bb in this example). Hence minor at it’s most natural state.

  • @dr2926
    @dr2926 Před 5 lety

    Huh?...

  • @lovemaakhe
    @lovemaakhe Před 4 lety

    why so hush hush 2:54

  • @AlessandroZir
    @AlessandroZir Před 3 lety

    why do people, even when they are just talking and trying to explain things, confound music with horse racing?! it makes most performances to look more like athletism and circus exhibition than anything else much less music...

  • @Philrc
    @Philrc Před 2 lety +1

    you're shooting through a lot of material WAY too fast..

  • @bill3837
    @bill3837 Před 3 lety

    whats up with the distressed chick ??

  • @tizizicoblack1246
    @tizizicoblack1246 Před 5 lety +4

    Explained too quickly. Please give a breath so i can understand better 😅

    • @parintelebaiazid80
      @parintelebaiazid80 Před 5 lety +1

      you do know there's a pause button... :)

    • @tizizicoblack1246
      @tizizicoblack1246 Před 5 lety +1

      Remus Grama if i watch a video and i have to stop it every 10 sec to understand another language i’ll be stressed. It was just an advise for the youtuber because i want to enjoy his explanations with all the comfort

    • @jayocaine2946
      @jayocaine2946 Před 5 lety

      @@tizizicoblack1246 If that gets you stressed, then by god I'm so sorry when you start experiencing the hardships of life xD

    • @flyingpenandpaper6119
      @flyingpenandpaper6119 Před 4 lety

      @@tizizicoblack1246 I understand your displeasure, but consider that other people may (presumably) know more about music theory than you, and thus find this even a little slow. I found the pace of this perfect. It's not possible to please everyone.

  • @superhussein
    @superhussein Před 3 lety

    this video insults islam because its not muslim music