The Chord That Should Not Be - 7#9 aka "Jimi Hendrix Chord" [MUSIC THEORY - MIXED THIRDS]

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  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2024
  • The Chord Progression Codex is NOW AVAILABLE! shorturl.at/bouLV
    Check out my Theory and Songwriting Course: bit.ly/3Ej44Cz
    If all you've learned is classical theory, then this chord makes no sense. It contains both the major and minor 3rd, which used to be a big no-no. However, it's contains the absolute essence of rock and blues music - the clashing between two thirds. This lesson explores how the b3 interacts with major chords, and vice versa. Along the way you should gain some knowledge on how to use the Jimi Hendrix chord (7#9) and other ways to compose with "mixed thirds".
    Here's the @AdamNeely video I mentioned at the end: • Tik Tok and dissonance...
    The following lessons should be great followups to this video since they involve some of the same concepts:
    Pentatonic Possibilities: • PENTATONIC POSSIBILITI...
    Mario Cadence: • THE MARIO CADENCE - Ho...
    Borrowed Chords: • Writing Progressions w...
    Modal Mixture: • Using Modal Mixture fo...
    Picardy Third: • The World's Most Hopef...
    My Patreon: / signalsmusicstudio
    My Site with premium courses for songwriters and musicians: www.signalsmusicstudio.com
    00:00 The Worst Chord In Music, IMO
    01:27 A Musical Axiom
    02:05 Major Triads + Minor 3rds
    03:43 7(#9) chord
    05:36 V7(#9)
    07:10 Where To Place The 9th
    07:55 Chromatically Approaching the 3rd
    09:40 Mutually Exclusive Thirds
    11:10 The Picardy 3rd
    12:58 Additional Thoughts

Komentáře • 366

  • @SignalsMusicStudio
    @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 2 měsíci +78

    CLARIFICATIONS AND CORRECTIONS!
    🔴When playing a 7(#9) chord, it's common to remove the 5th in the chord. Why? Because it really doesn't add any "important flavors" to the chord. Also, the nature of the guitar makes it difficult or sometimes impossible to play afull 7(#9) chord.
    🔴As mentioned at 07:10, you'll rarely hear the 3 and b3 played side-by-side on a single instrument. But across different instruments, you can expect that the two will compete against one another in a blues or rock setting. For example, a blues pianist might play A7 with a major 3rd of C#, and in that same octave, a lead player might play a C natural.
    🔴There is some VERY UGLY NOTATION at 10:53, during the David Gilmour lick. I wrote this tablature in MuseScore and forgot to check all the staff notes :(
    🔴At the end of this video, when I say my videos have "no ads," I meant promotions or in-video advertisement. I don't have ads in my lessons because 1) i hate ads and 2) they completely destroy the flow of an educational lesson. But I do monetize this channel, meaning you probably see some ads before clicking on one of my videos. This collects enough money to pay a few bills, but it's really my patreon supporters who enable me to make straightforward lessons without spamming you with VPN ads, razors, or one of the other hundred other companies bugging me to do ad-reads!

    • @philm.6113
      @philm.6113 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Most of the things you discuss are beyond my skill level. However, I listen because I know you are gifted. Thanks for all that you have shared regarding music. One day it will click for me.

    • @Headbanger2290
      @Headbanger2290 Před 2 měsíci +1

      You should pin this comment

    • @Trey-bien
      @Trey-bien Před 2 měsíci

      Good clarifications. Thanks much!

    • @Trey-bien
      @Trey-bien Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks for commenting about omitting the 5th! I was noticing that when I go to try this chord on my baritone uke I'll have to omitting the 5th scale degree for lack of strings. So it's good to know that's a common practice on a six-string.

    • @Williamk492
      @Williamk492 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The 5th is often left out, especially with jazz chords (dominant 7, minor 7, mayor 7 etc.) These are called ‘shell chords’. Playing the 5th in the chord just ‘clutters’ things up.

  • @johnt.mickevich2772
    @johnt.mickevich2772 Před 2 měsíci +85

    The cigarette and whisky graphic were hilarious.

    • @kozmobluemusic
      @kozmobluemusic Před 12 dny

      hi, my name is kozmo, and i have a seventh chord addiction.

  • @braxal6983
    @braxal6983 Před 2 měsíci +128

    I am so happy to see more of your videos Jake. Please keep them coming!!!

  • @noobguitarist1570
    @noobguitarist1570 Před měsícem +7

    Please never stop making these as you give hope to guitarists who are trying really hard

  • @CometMedal
    @CometMedal Před 2 měsíci +41

    YEAHHHHH! ANOTHER LESSON!
    Thank you, Mr. Lizzio!!!

  • @zevelgamer.
    @zevelgamer. Před 2 měsíci +30

    WELCOME BACK BABY!
    I'm not even a guitarist and I know music theory but I still love your videos and I still can learn something from them.

  • @southboundguitar
    @southboundguitar Před 2 měsíci +17

    Jake! Long time no see, bud! Glad to see you're still at it. I don't know that I would've made the progress that I made without your channel. Thanks for all of the hard work!

  • @ND62511
    @ND62511 Před měsícem +10

    Dude, I remember watching a ton of your videos when I first started studying music theory, it’s so cool to see you upload again!

  • @tomy8339
    @tomy8339 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Great to see you back with new videos! ✨

  • @ameratassi1852
    @ameratassi1852 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Great to see you making content again man. I love the channel and your work ethics. I learned a lot from your channel. Massive respect.

  • @mikeivey8471
    @mikeivey8471 Před měsícem +1

    So glad to see you back at it making great educational videos again !!! Thank you !!

  • @luke5100
    @luke5100 Před měsícem +2

    Holy shit! Jake is back! I’m glad you are alive lol. Looking forward to catching up on your last couple recent videos which completely snuck past me. Welcome back!

  • @imcameronlee
    @imcameronlee Před měsícem +1

    10:30 Beautiful. So glad to have you back, Jake! You're like my favorite music CZcams channel!

  • @turtleCalledCalmie
    @turtleCalledCalmie Před 2 měsíci +1

    your content and lessons are among most fun and informative across whole youtube

  • @daviddavidson1355
    @daviddavidson1355 Před měsícem

    Nice to see you again Jake, your videos are so insightful

  • @Tacosandcheeseburgers
    @Tacosandcheeseburgers Před měsícem +1

    Dude i love your videos. I'm so glad that you're back.

  • @edubs9828
    @edubs9828 Před 2 měsíci +5

    New Signals Music Studio video HYPE! I'm so pumped

  • @seinmstudio
    @seinmstudio Před měsícem

    I only discovered this channel recently and, seriously, where have you been all my life!

  • @TruthAndMoreTruth
    @TruthAndMoreTruth Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for this lesson. Incredibly well presented as usual.

  • @themanumission
    @themanumission Před měsícem +1

    You're a great, great teacher and this video is gold. Great didactics without under or overestimating the audience. On point! Thanks!

  • @thelanavishnuorchestra
    @thelanavishnuorchestra Před 2 měsíci +3

    Hey, that was really useful and presented clearly. Instant subscribe. I'm gonna hit up your back catalog.

  • @fazzification
    @fazzification Před měsícem

    Welcome back jake. Have learned much from you and look forward to learning a lot more.

  • @escueladeartesemocionales
    @escueladeartesemocionales Před 2 měsíci +1

    I ALWAYS wonder about this. Love the hendrix chord since the first time I heard it. This was top notch as usual, you spoiled us! Thank you

  • @s90210h
    @s90210h Před měsícem

    this thought me a LOT Jake! stellar work yet again

  • @gountberlin1669
    @gountberlin1669 Před měsícem

    great explanation, mate! keep up the great work, much love

  • @Wishmasters
    @Wishmasters Před 2 měsíci +2

    man, I'm just happy to be subscribed to this channel, those videos are really great
    Trying to slowly but surely learn (guitar) music theory (I am a drummer). You explain and show it on a level that resonates with me very well :)

  • @robinmartini7968
    @robinmartini7968 Před 2 měsíci

    Another fantastic video, great enthusiasm and wonderful music!

  • @frankiesunswept
    @frankiesunswept Před 2 měsíci

    So great brotha, as a guitar teacher myself I'm always dreaming of ways to explain this exact conundrum. Cheers to you for putting it all together and sharing this info! Man, if I'd had this youtube channel when I was a teenager. Amazing

  • @crawdaddyOKC
    @crawdaddyOKC Před měsícem

    The Chord Progression Codex is amazing. Thank you for putting that together.

  • @spongebabe27
    @spongebabe27 Před měsícem +4

    Holy crap this is a big moment for me, i waited patiently for two years and only on your third video back does CZcams deem it appropriate to let me know! 😅
    Welcome back man we've missed ya

  • @martinchocoo
    @martinchocoo Před měsícem

    jake I love you please never stop making videos

  • @GarageGroovin
    @GarageGroovin Před 2 měsíci +1

    The solo section around 10 minutes in is great! That weird modal mixture sound where just one note shifts a half step has become one of my favorite musical "toys" - that little shift really stands out to the ear and creates these little moments of interest.
    I think I actually first started exploring this as a result of your video where you demo'ed that Emaj7 - Am progression, but another great example is the jam sections from The Grateful Dead's song Eyes of the World. It goes from an Emaj7 to a Bm, and there's this shift from E major to E mixolydian. In that case the note that "shifts" is the 7th - you play the natural seven over the Emaj, then use the flat 7 in the mixolydian portion. Every time I land that little shift as the chord changes, there's a special little moment of interest and satisfaction.
    There are so many cool progressions that use a trick like that, it's a very cool thing to explore. Thanks for your vids!

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen Před měsícem +1

      It’s been used over and over all over rock and blues for at least 100 years.

  • @daniel.lopresti
    @daniel.lopresti Před 2 měsíci +34

    As soon as you played THE chord, I instantly heard purple haze.

    • @JohnnyCameo
      @JohnnyCameo Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah. It was in my brain as well 😎

    • @joncollins7129
      @joncollins7129 Před měsícem +3

      They were super common in jazz and classical music before that, and now it's known as the "Jimmie Hendrix Chord" lol

    • @simonhawker9277
      @simonhawker9277 Před měsícem

      purple haze voodo chile the #9th gets used alot by srv too also that song funky town but its a jazz chord from green dolphin street peter gunn ans many many more

    • @ThinPicks
      @ThinPicks Před měsícem +1

      ​@@simonhawker9277It's also in Hocus Pocus by Focus, after each descending chord progression after the riff, but on the first one Jan leaves his pinky on the top string to add a C note, really dramatic!

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen Před měsícem +1

      @@ThinPicks and 10,000 other songs……

  • @philbeau
    @philbeau Před 2 měsíci +1

    min3 half-sharp is also very useful in blues, especially with slide players. So in key E, halfway between G and G#.

  • @trelligan42
    @trelligan42 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent presentation of an obscure topic, bonus points for the callout to Adam Neely. #FeedTheAlgorithm

  • @JBrooksNYS
    @JBrooksNYS Před měsícem

    You're finally back!!!

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreet Před měsícem +1

    One of the most intriguing applications of this “wrong but right” clashing thirds thing, is in the song “Drive my car” by the Beatles, specifically in the “you can do something in between” bit. The twist is that the perceived dissonance isn’t between major and minor thirds that are actually played, but between the minor third that we ACTUALLY hear, and a major third that, while in reality it is entirely absent, is so clearly IMPLIED by the context in which the chord appears that our brains sort of supply the major/minor dissonance that isn’t really there.
    The weird thing is that, in the context of the song, it sounds really crunchy and dissonant, and is often erroneously transcribed as an A7 #5 #9 chord, a pretty dissonant chord. But if you actually analyse what notes are being played/sung, in isolation, it’s not particularly dissonant at all. It’s just a major triad in first inversion, with an added major 2nd above the root. Specifically, it’s just an F add 9 with the third in the bass.
    Now, if you just play an F add 9 over an A bass, in isolation, it is NOT going to sound like that chord from “Drive my Car”. Out of context, it entirely lacks the distinctive dissonant “crunch” associated with that moment in the song.
    But… in the song it appears in the context of the key of D major, exactly at the point where we expect to hear a classic dominant 7 chord built on the fifth degree, which would be an A7. Also, the lowest note is an A. So the context primes us to experience the chord, not as an F chord, but as some kind of A7, even though it’s missing the major third required to make it that chord. If it’s any kind of A chord, you would think it would be an A minor, as it DOES have the minor third. But we simply don’t experience it that way. We experience it as a major chord, and we experience the minor third that in reality is an integral part of the chord as a dissonant blue note over it.

  • @cyrilleharvey3771
    @cyrilleharvey3771 Před měsícem

    E7#9 is also the first chord in Sunny Day Real Estate's song "Killed By An Angel". First time I ever played that chord was when I figured out that song when I was 14 or 15 years old. I'm almost positive (despite my fuzzy memory of how to even play the song) that the guitar line in the verse resolves into dancing with accidentals around an arpeggiated A Maj chord. Interesting in light of what you were saying about the interplay of E7#9 and A Maj
    It was fun to hear your analysis of this. I had always felt like this chord shape was dissonant and a bit strange, yet powerful as hell when utilized properly; and I hadn't really thought about it much in the last 25 years since then.

  • @salmonflop
    @salmonflop Před 2 měsíci +5

    One thing to note is that minor 9th intervals sound very dissonant and won't sound right in most contexts. A 3 above a b3 creates a minor 9th interval, while a #9 above a 3 creates a major 7th interval. This would explain why it sounds better in major.
    However, that doesn't explain why the #9 sounds good in the bass (this creates a minor 9th). It probably works because it gives the major chord a dominant sound, which is all about tension.

    • @rome8180
      @rome8180 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I made exactly this same comment. The minor 9th has pretty limited application. It sounds really cool if you add it to a V7 chord before resolving to a I or a i, for example. The reason is because the V7-I movement is already built on tension and release. The V7 already has several notes pulling you toward the tonic chord. By introducing a b9, you simply get an even greater pull toward that tonic.
      The major 7th is much easier to work with.

  • @Petch85
    @Petch85 Před 2 měsíci

    🥰 I missed these inspiring videos. I feel like playing with adding the major and minor 3eds to different cords now. Try it as the base note, or add it an octave o two higher than the root note. I might try that later today. Thanks for the inspiration. 😍

  • @damiens4601
    @damiens4601 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Another awesome thing you can do is V7#9 - V7b9 - i . Or, speaking of stealing from Pink Floyd, D7#9 - D7b9 - Em

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yep! I didn't want to get into flat 9s (that's it's own lesson IMO) but i teach V7#9 - V7b9 - i in the Codex. The pink Floyd song Breathe actually resolves more like a backdoor cadence though, bVII - i (D to Em)

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen Před měsícem

      Those are all used as passing tones for a long time.

  • @Rorre65
    @Rorre65 Před měsícem

    Absolutely LOVE your videos! 🎉

  • @gerardobecher9404
    @gerardobecher9404 Před 2 měsíci

    Tie Your Mother Down by Queen is another example of playing the minor 3th followed by the major 3th. It's in the very well known rythmic guitar riff created by Brian May that plays a natural C followed by a C# on an A chord. There's also a C chord later, where the minor third appears and the major third goes out.

  • @TripTilt
    @TripTilt Před 2 měsíci

    most appreciated. Thanks for making more lessons! :)

  • @timclay8277
    @timclay8277 Před měsícem +1

    When your book is available in the UK i will buy it for sure. I really want to support your work and say thank you for all these amazing lessons.

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před měsícem +1

      Currently available to ship to UK!

    • @timclay8277
      @timclay8277 Před měsícem

      @@SignalsMusicStudio Brilliant news... save me a copy. I'll order this week !

  • @grigthefirst
    @grigthefirst Před 2 měsíci +3

    Great stuff!

  • @chrishelbling3879
    @chrishelbling3879 Před 2 měsíci

    Wonderful topic. I remember a G7#9 used for the piano fill stabs, in between the phrases in the chorus of "Maybe I'm Amazed," for the reasons you mention. I think this chord was favored by jazz keyboardists, since they can't play "in-between" the keys to hit that blue note, the way a guitar / voice / clarinet / harmonica can bend in to it.

  • @TomBelknapRoc
    @TomBelknapRoc Před 2 měsíci +1

    This was an amazing video! It's so necessary for us as musicians to come at topics like this major/minor rub from new perspectives and with a different focus. Yes, I can see why this video could be confusing to a newer musician. But the good news is: it's all confusing until it's not. Food for thought is way more important than knowing every ingredient.

  • @risteardohaodha23
    @risteardohaodha23 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video. I was listening while driving, looking forward to rewatching with a guitar in the evening.

  • @DaPoopIsInDaPudding
    @DaPoopIsInDaPudding Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great channel. Love the work you do.

  • @MrBileTooth
    @MrBileTooth Před 2 měsíci +1

    One of the best lessons I've seen on CZcams, I'd rate it 7#9/5.

  • @Hosker25
    @Hosker25 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I'm halfway through the Chord Progression Codex and it's great!

  • @maribethjones2484
    @maribethjones2484 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video Jake. Thanks. I learned a lot.

  • @mikedonovan4768
    @mikedonovan4768 Před 22 dny

    Finally ! I used this 7#9 Hendrix chord in one of my recordings and didn't know what it was, but it suited the track. Now I know ! Thank Jake 👍

  • @Mrtn-gi6mp
    @Mrtn-gi6mp Před měsícem

    I bought a used 6505MH awhile ago and I agree it’s an amazing amp head from raw metal tones to Heavy Blues tones ..
    ..just WOW every time I hit power on‼️. Onto Peavey cabs next 👍

  • @matthewperry6506
    @matthewperry6506 Před měsícem

    The whole blues major minor things took me forever to wrap my head around when 1st learning music theory, this video gonna help a lot of people to get them on the right track.
    Good see ya back :)

  • @jonthehermit8082
    @jonthehermit8082 Před měsícem

    Cool man, I’ve been thinking about and messing with this very concept, and was just thinking minor third is happy in major context but not the opposite. You elaborated on it nicely, appreciated.

  • @shalomshalom735
    @shalomshalom735 Před 2 měsíci +1

    WELCOME BACK JAKE ! I truly hope you'll post more regularly now. I LOVE your channel and enjoy your videos very much.

  • @egilsandnes9637
    @egilsandnes9637 Před 2 měsíci +2

    A couple of years ago I was improvising a song on piano, and I happened to do that minor third over a major chord, and it's so good. My tune feels completely wrong if it's not there. I just checked, and I do not play the fifth, but a minor seventh. I might change that to a major seventh in a later verse, but it's actually almost too spicy in the context of the tune.

  • @bobjoe7508
    @bobjoe7508 Před 2 měsíci

    Fantastic video that’s very helpful with composition. Also the mutually exclusive thirds jam absolutely sounds like a million 80s and 90s power ballads. A lot of songs use that tonality all over the place.

  • @blkmarinewolf
    @blkmarinewolf Před 2 měsíci

    Welcome back!!!

  • @boi5275
    @boi5275 Před měsícem

    love to see someone who knows what theyre talking about and explains it well

  • @tsbiscaro
    @tsbiscaro Před měsícem

    Your voice is fenomenal!

  • @yeetyeetonthestreet-colinm1186

    Omg the best guitar teacher is back, and it’s a video on jimi hendrix at that !!! let’s go

  • @davidbaise5137
    @davidbaise5137 Před 2 měsíci

    Good explaining. I love the sound, love JH. I heard the same sound in string quartets by Mozart, too.

  • @fredericadda
    @fredericadda Před 2 měsíci +2

    The Codex is amazing ❤
    First time I actually enjoy reading a music theory book from cover to cover

  • @loveguitars
    @loveguitars Před 2 měsíci +1

    Awesome lesson!!👍🙏

  • @angeloostjen7819
    @angeloostjen7819 Před měsícem

    A maior dificuldade que eu tive no estudo da harmonia foi esse "olha como soa estranho as terças maior e menor tocadas ao mesmo tempo", aí eu ouço o som e acho lindo. Foi um caminho longo e árduo pra entender a harmonia tradicional e como ignorar ela solenemente na hora de compôr, pra não limitar a arte a uma convenção, uma vez que a convenção jamais se aplica a expressão de maneira eficaz.

  • @timothyclay3668
    @timothyclay3668 Před měsícem

    2023 will forever be known as the signals-less year. Love watching these videos again.

  • @DeskLazer
    @DeskLazer Před 2 měsíci

    Dylan Carlson from Earth (especially the modern version of the band) uses the minor to major third move a lot in his music. Has a country/blues twang while still being over a moody chord.
    Great vid as always Jake!

  • @orchestore22
    @orchestore22 Před měsícem

    Youre such a great music educator!

  • @thesingingaccountant1
    @thesingingaccountant1 Před měsícem

    Best videos on CZcams period

  • @INCAnitysy
    @INCAnitysy Před 2 měsíci

    Another goated upload by our goated teacher 🎉

  • @gassug2
    @gassug2 Před 2 měsíci +1

    i consider myself to be decently versed at understanding the concepts of music theory.
    even if something like this is considered review for me, I still love it. because there's always an opportunity to learn more

  • @StonyBlazestation
    @StonyBlazestation Před 2 měsíci

    It’s been a long time since I played it, but I believe Opeth’s song Deliverance uses an F#7#9 chord in the riff under the first couple verses. Though it may be something else, because I definitely wouldn’t call that riff bluesy 😄

  • @supremelordoftheuniverse5449

    Check out The Magnificent Seven by The Clash, on the live version in From Here to Eternity at around 00:59. One guitar plays major the other minor simultaneously

  • @user-tz4ig1xj8p
    @user-tz4ig1xj8p Před měsícem

    It's (shhh) jazz. A tritone substituted Bb13 shell chord. The key elements are the D (maj3) and Ab (7) of the Bb13 that invert to produce a G# (maj 3) and D (7) in E7#9... G moves from the 13 to the #9 (F##). You can do this with all altered and extended dominant chords due to the tritone between the maj3 and the 7. Blues loves a dominant seventh chord so we're not compelled to resolve it, and because the bass is firmly E, we think E dominant.
    This is the same reason that E minor pentatonic works over an E7 chord... that "G" is actually an F##, #9. It works fine over a bass player playing a walking line that incorporates G# (maj 3).

  • @MKDumas1981
    @MKDumas1981 Před 2 měsíci

    8:57 - The main riff to "Have a Drink on Me" by AC/DC has that "corrected" third.

  • @Pooter-it4yg
    @Pooter-it4yg Před měsícem

    In jazz (and therefore funk and fusion) the full scale elaboration of a 7#9 chord is typically either of:
    R b9 #9 3 #11 5 6 b7 (half-whole diminished scale)
    R b9 #9 3 #11 #5 b7 (altered scale)
    Both sound bluesy but the latter especially so. Actually by shorthand convention the first one is notated 7b9 and the latter 7#9, even though both contain both 9ths as well as other alterations.

  • @erikberg8352
    @erikberg8352 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Great lesson, and the graphics around 4:45 had me lol'ing

  • @JeffreyStock
    @JeffreyStock Před měsícem

    You said it well: the clashing of thirds. Which is why I really prefer calling this a "flat 10" chord rather than a "sharp 9." But I realize nobody does that.

  • @MKDumas1981
    @MKDumas1981 Před 2 měsíci

    4:07 - I know that chord as the chord that comes in on beat two of the chorus of "Thinderkiss '65“ by White Zombie.

  • @treyyoung7152
    @treyyoung7152 Před měsícem

    Hell yeah !!!He posted!!!

  • @anthonymitchellalice
    @anthonymitchellalice Před 2 měsíci

    Your videos are the best on youtube.

  • @AdonisMediaProductions
    @AdonisMediaProductions Před 2 měsíci

    Another great video and a badass shirt!

  • @crazydougthewolf
    @crazydougthewolf Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks again!

  •  Před 2 měsíci

    AMAZING !

  • @NautilusGuitars
    @NautilusGuitars Před měsícem

    As a new viewer, that face reveal of talking while playing was something else haha. I was thinking "Oh that's cool, he must've pre-recorded the script and then played to it to keep the notes in line with what he's describing."
    But no, you were playing and casually reciting your script at the same time like a savage! Love it!

  • @stubbsmusic543
    @stubbsmusic543 Před měsícem

    This relationship naturally occurs in the dominant 13th Court. From the bottom up, the voicing of the flat seventh third and 13th creates that critical element. E7#9 A13 D7#9 G13 highlights the usability and beauty of that musical phenomenon. The song "Spinning Wheel " uses a very obvious version of that combination in a sequence. On a more obscure note, the sonority created from flat seven major third and sharp nine in atonal classical music is referred to as the "Viennese triad."

  • @dmytrotsvyntarnyi799
    @dmytrotsvyntarnyi799 Před měsícem

    3:33 yes, and no. The chord that uses both the minor and the major thirds both of which function like thirds and not ninths is often cslled the "split-third chord" or "mixed third chord"

  • @MatheusRobis
    @MatheusRobis Před 2 měsíci +160

    babe wake up !!!!

    • @bumbum3439
      @bumbum3439 Před měsícem

      This guy is teaching classical college music he is correct in that way however THE maj 3 is ablue note in minor

    • @seanu6840
      @seanu6840 Před měsícem +4

      Don’t wake her up she’s had a rough week

  • @rueburch2856
    @rueburch2856 Před 2 měsíci +1

    12:41 Though one example does come from a very successful song from the late '60s: Light My Fire, where the verse progression goes from Am to F#m. Of course, that 'haunting' quality is there too (I remember feeling really uncomfortable with that progression when I first heard it).

  • @adamlauxd
    @adamlauxd Před měsícem

    Thank you patrons! I think I finally get 7#9

  • @christopherfryda
    @christopherfryda Před 2 měsíci

    I love this channel!!!

  • @riggitywrckd4325
    @riggitywrckd4325 Před 2 měsíci

    I was also sitting here with my keyboard working out the music math and man does it sound bad when you bring the extra weird note down into the other notes register instead of playing it at a high pitch over the top or in the bass line. Thanks for clarifying that at the 7m mark :)

  • @nikosantikythera2422
    @nikosantikythera2422 Před měsícem

    Beautiful dissonance!!

  • @PaulMcCaffreyfmac
    @PaulMcCaffreyfmac Před měsícem

    It's interesting how your thumbnail picture has become almost the default Hendrix picture in recent months. It's interesting to me particularly because it is from one of the two Albert Hall shows in February 1969, both of which I was at.

  • @jllhrmonica
    @jllhrmonica Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you!

  • @julianloef202
    @julianloef202 Před měsícem

    Amazing video

  • @manojkrishna8839
    @manojkrishna8839 Před měsícem +1

    I know some Indians songs that have both major and minor thirds. They were composed in Sindhu Bhairavi and Piloo / Kapi ragas. One of them is "Thumbi Vaa" composed by Illayaraja. It was composed in the Kapi raga. 😊