The Bizarre World of Augmented Chords

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  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2024
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    Augmented chords are awkward, weird, and can seem useless. It took me a while to
    eventually grasp on what aug chords are capable of- as well as aug7 (or +7) chords. They're certainly a unique sounding chord, and in this lesson we go over the basics behind how the triad is built, but also how it can be used in musical settings. Depending on your knowledge of music theory, this lesson may get too advanced near the end, but it should be simple to follow for the first half at least.
    Here's how Mike Muggli made the ragtime piano bit: • Ragtime + augmented ch...
    In this video:
    00:00 Intro
    00:29 Augmented Triad Basics
    02:20 Swapping V for V+
    04:37 Adding Sevenths
    05:48 Voice Leading
    08:21 Augment Symmetry + Composing
    10:54 Lydian Augmented
    12:29 MinMaj7 Relationships
    I made a mistake when walking through my "ragtime piano chords" piece. I accidentally played a B7 (and said V/ii) instead of a B+ (V+ / ii). Hope you'll forgive me!
    Thanks to my outstanding Patreon subscribers for sponsoring these lessons. If you learned something from this video, your appreciation should go to them. Especially the following fine folks!
    Adam Granger
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    Lord of the Chords Live on Indiegogo Now!
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Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @vargapatrik2967
    @vargapatrik2967 Před 3 lety +1864

    If you raise one of the notes of an augmented chord by a half step, you get a minor chord, if you lower one, you get a major chord. And because of the symmetry of the augmented chord, it can be used as a "portal" chord, much like diminished seventh chords.

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +343

      This is one of those things I discovered a long time ago and then forgot! Maybe another video is in order that shows those symmetries and tries to use them to compose.... Like you said, it is certainly a "portal" in MANY different ways, where as dim7 has a pretty strict resolution mechanism. Just thinking about the myriad possibilites kinda scares me.

    • @SteveMeiers
      @SteveMeiers Před 3 lety +24

      "Portals: Fascinating" - Spock
      Great stuff! Sounds like another excellent topic for Jake to expound on!

    • @chrisbrodbeck1961
      @chrisbrodbeck1961 Před 3 lety +5

      hell yeah man ty

    • @vichinodda5795
      @vichinodda5795 Před 3 lety +20

      @@SignalsMusicStudio This seems like having the portal gun with the blue and orange portals. You want to get to a chord and suddenly you have 2 options, you can go through the aug chord or through the dim7. So many colours to explore come to mind. (Without mentioning the possible colours that you can get from borrowing those aug chords from the parallel modes of melodic minor and harmonic minor, it makes me shiver just from thinking about it).

    • @gwalla
      @gwalla Před 3 lety +5

      Raise the root!  ̄\(°∀°)/ ̄

  • @faselblaDer3te
    @faselblaDer3te Před 3 lety +1569

    We literally live in a time, where advanced concepts are taught for free, on demand, not locally limited, to anyone willing to listen and with access to the internet, which is spread almost anywhere.
    Can we please take a moment to appreciate that, and to thank Jake Lizardboi for being one of the people making that possible?

    • @iamdisgusted
      @iamdisgusted Před 3 lety +29

      Can you please tell me why, I was thinking the same thing yesterday. Like I learn more about music on youtube than I did in college. Like wow!!!!! Smh

    • @guitar9310
      @guitar9310 Před 3 lety +6

      Thank god for people sharing this!!!

    • @robingoud7160
      @robingoud7160 Před 3 lety +11

      Been thinking about it a lot, As if we all choose to be part of a hive mind we call the internet.

    • @almizanalawal
      @almizanalawal Před 3 lety +5

      faselblaDer3te
      You are right : thanks to him and all others who teach us. Amazing to notice synchronicities thanks to the internet : many teachers sharing on the same topic across countries in other languages too...

    • @paradoxikalparalysis
      @paradoxikalparalysis Před 3 lety +10

      Lol Lizardboi?

  • @martincox9691
    @martincox9691 Před 3 lety +131

    “Tonal Pugatory”. I’ve heard that used to describe my playing more than once.........

  • @Ultima2876
    @Ultima2876 Před 3 lety +95

    Interesting point: You can actually resolve ANYTHING to the 1, as long as it has the 5 note in the bass. So if you make a chord that has an E in the bass and any other notes on top (literally any), then resolve it to an A major (or A minor) chord, it will resolve well. This is a great way of introducing really weird melody notes into your song.

    • @lunaponta594
      @lunaponta594 Před 2 lety +8

      holy fuck that's actually true. and each combination has a slightly different color. i just don't like putting the #IV chord on top of the V to resolve to I for obvious reasons, but that's the only instance i didn't think it was resololving

  • @puderrick8634
    @puderrick8634 Před 3 lety +202

    Instructions Unclear: every time I play this cord a mysterious stranger appears

    • @willmartin3067
      @willmartin3067 Před 3 lety +2

      You brought be back with that one

    • @SeanJZoning
      @SeanJZoning Před 3 lety

      Hey, I understood that reference :0!!

    • @naldorgarnier
      @naldorgarnier Před 3 lety

      Same with this video there's a misterious guy on the back must be the chord.

    • @SteveMeiers
      @SteveMeiers Před 3 lety

      It's kind of the Donnie Darko chord.

    • @moadot720
      @moadot720 Před 3 lety

      Arnaldo Rivera Spelling...

  • @robranney-blake8731
    @robranney-blake8731 Před 3 lety +470

    Nothing makes Jake smile more than making “uncomfortable” music.

  • @Sparkda
    @Sparkda Před 3 lety +571

    Every music theory video I have ever watched: "oh yeah the Beatles did it"

    • @cuteasxtreme
      @cuteasxtreme Před 3 lety +5

      @Zizzi's Genetics you should just cover up all those gross old Hendrix stickers with Beibs then...

    • @KrunkCobain
      @KrunkCobain Před 3 lety +5

      @Zizzi's Genetics haha that person's disgusting taste was the original taste, got to it before you and loved it up nice.

    • @ileryon4019
      @ileryon4019 Před 3 lety +1

      @Zizzi's Genetics whats wrong with dababy

    • @matthewfontaine4928
      @matthewfontaine4928 Před 3 lety

      Zizzi's Genetics lmfao

    • @dewdop
      @dewdop Před 3 lety +1

      @@ileryon4019 a boring repetitive flow imo

  • @tsisqua
    @tsisqua Před 3 lety +89

    Bach: "Think I'll raise the 7th in minor to get a leading tone." (Harmonic Minor) "Cool! I get a dominant 7th on V, just like in Major! Yay!" (Looks back at the third triad) "What the hell is that?".

    • @CMM5300
      @CMM5300 Před 2 lety +3

      Same thing in melodic minor. Lol what the hell is that?

    • @tsisqua
      @tsisqua Před 2 lety +4

      @@CMM5300 Yes. I found chord progressions difficult in melodic minor when I was in college, since typically the scale is only altered when ascending. Most of the chords I had trouble with during harmonic analysis were actually incidental chords created by the changing notes of the scale, and they really weren't part of the harmony. Yet, there they were! Resulted in a lot of "C" grades on my analysis tests.

    • @CMM5300
      @CMM5300 Před 2 lety +8

      @@tsisqua right. The classical version. Jazz melodic minor is the same ascending and descending. Then you get 7 modes from it also.
      1 Mel min (Am maj7)
      2 Dorian b2 (Bm 7 )
      3 Lydian aug (Caug maj7)
      4 Lydian Dom (D7)
      5 mixolydian b6 (E7)
      6 loc natural 2 (F# Min7b5)
      7 loc b4 (G# half dim )

    • @tsisqua
      @tsisqua Před 2 lety +3

      @@CMM5300 Same usage has developed in Rock music for melodic minor. And yes, I was at first an education major. So everything was classical training in harmony until year 4 when we LIGHTLY studied Jazz and Rock music. I'm going to paste your reply into a notepad doc for future reference. Thanks, Chris!

    • @CMM5300
      @CMM5300 Před 2 lety

      @@tsisqua your welcome. I'm self taught. From what I understand the difference between min7b5 and half
      diminished is: min7b5 resolves down half diminished resolves up. Other than that it's the same chord.

  • @SignalsMusicStudio
    @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +140

    Sorry for the slow upload schedule! I've been active on Patreon lessons but sluggish with
    CZcams. Looking to change that this week for a faster delivery of Riffing with Modes #6 =)

    • @ruud2661
      @ruud2661 Před 3 lety +6

      Thanks for everything you do, Jake! A funk guitar crash course (like the blues one) would be amazing though. If and when you find the time. Cheers :)

    • @tylerhackner9731
      @tylerhackner9731 Před 3 lety +3

      It’s alright man. Love your informative channel.

    • @Ryoksos
      @Ryoksos Před 3 lety +2

      Dude, I know Mike Muggli in real life and I had no idea you two knew each other cuz I found you independently, that’s crazy!

    • @CyberDocUSA
      @CyberDocUSA Před 3 lety +2

      @@ruud2661 gotta hear Jake funk some shite up[ fo' sho'.

    • @Rfugitt1
      @Rfugitt1 Před 3 lety

      Yes please more mode videos! Working on an E Phrygian metal song now

  • @craigstephenson7676
    @craigstephenson7676 Před 3 lety +228

    If you take an augmented chord and the augmented chord a whole step above if you get the whole tone scale. I feel like that is important when discussing augmented chords

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +89

      I haven't done a video on the whole tone scales yet, when I do I'll refer back to this video :)

    • @seiph80
      @seiph80 Před 3 lety +7

      @@SignalsMusicStudio I'm waiting for that video, I love the whole tone scale!

    •  Před 3 lety +5

      @@SignalsMusicStudio it works great to use the whole tone on top of an aug chord. It also works to "repeat a bass note" to force some kind of tonic to the whole tone scale

    • @seiph80
      @seiph80 Před 3 lety +5

      @ Yep, that's a neat trick, like "Veils" from Claude Debussy where he forces you to hear B flat as the "tonic," if you will, by repeating that note again and again.

    •  Před 3 lety +2

      @@seiph80 not to mention the immense "release of tension" from just a pentatonic scale at the middle section, which, to me, is a major example of how to create excitement from non-traditional / diatonic sources

  • @benjaminbeam5273
    @benjaminbeam5273 Před 3 lety +22

    Also worth mentioning that augmented chords contain notes of the whole tone scale. Playing whole tone over an augmented chord in place of the 5 chord sounds super good.

  • @marinagallant1847
    @marinagallant1847 Před 3 lety +72

    I actually love an augmented chord because it makes me feel sound in a way that I don't with non-augmented chords. It's the anticipation that makes life interesting.

  • @Erebus-qu8mu
    @Erebus-qu8mu Před 3 lety +152

    Jake deserves way more subscribers for his intros alone, not to mention the top class content! Thanks brother!

  • @nkg1190
    @nkg1190 Před 3 lety +506

    Augmented chords are literally just "????"

    • @moka8267
      @moka8267 Před 3 lety +15

      Sosig

    • @fallout3freak360
      @fallout3freak360 Před 3 lety +11

      I feel the same way about mM7 chords

    • @JustSeby
      @JustSeby Před 3 lety +10

      @@fallout3freak360 I think that's because there is an augmented chord based on the 3rd note of a minMaj7 chord. If you have AminMaj7 for instance, the 3rd is C, E (the 5th) is a major third above it, G# (the maj7) is another major third above, and then another major 3rd back to C. And there you have it :)

    • @janus9148
      @janus9148 Před 3 lety

      Lmao yes

    • @Stevenotfamous
      @Stevenotfamous Před 3 lety +2

      I think the ? could be described as you don't know whats coming next. You know something is coming, but there are various directions it can goes to, so its kinda of a ? in a box that's contains a chord, but you don't what that is...yet..

  • @muragaru553
    @muragaru553 Před 2 lety +16

    Man, that Lydian Augmented sounded really cool how it was played. It made me think of the desert at dusk or something or some alien world with a civilization long-gone, dust twirling in the wind.

  • @brettnorris1428
    @brettnorris1428 Před 3 lety +70

    Iron Maiden's "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is a great example of augmented arpeggios (although played on the bass). The augmented tonality alongside the 'creaking boat' sound effects and the guitar swells really creates the ambience of a deserted ship on the water at night.

    • @mere_illusion
      @mere_illusion Před rokem +1

      @Andrew Hager ok mister divide and conquer

    • @TheBanana93
      @TheBanana93 Před rokem +2

      @Andrew Hager Metallica and Iron maiden are fairly different bands to be honest man. Both important bands of course I don't even listen to either particularly but you are comparing apples to oranges

    • @flavy1000
      @flavy1000 Před rokem

      That's it!!

    • @TristanJCumpole
      @TristanJCumpole Před 10 měsíci

      I came into the comments specifically to point this one out. It oozes mystery, the unknown of being in fog, the shortness of how far you can see and the creepy lack of ability to know what is happening, or going to happen. Tonally as a chord, this could be resolved in two completely opposite ways and I think you internalise this even when those resolutions are not being offered. Could it go dark or light? Both are equally likely at this point, and you are simultaneously being strung between both.

  • @crimfan
    @crimfan Před 3 lety +34

    "What if I told you we could have a whole tonality built around an augmented chord?"
    Breaks out some King Crimson.

  • @viridianloom
    @viridianloom Před 3 lety +59

    When I started getting into music theory and I was trying to memorize the circle of fifths I would draw it during the downtime at work, and then like some kind of lovecraftian plot or something I began to see all kinds of patterns in the circle and the relationship between notes that really opened my mind to the brilliance in it's simplicity. augmented is fun since it forms a triangle, drawing a right angle gives you the minor, drawing the right angle backwards gives you the parallel minor, etc.

    • @westernrider100
      @westernrider100 Před 3 lety +7

      Please, please, be forewarned and guard yourself. The secrets of the late Eric Zann are located therein.

    • @chainsherlock6268
      @chainsherlock6268 Před 3 lety +1

      Awesome; men are very visual and that sounds like something I would do; especially at a boring desk job, 😉

  • @pentalarclikesit822
    @pentalarclikesit822 Před 3 lety +38

    Maybe it's because I write probably 90% of the stuff I do in minor, and use a lot of phyrgian and locrian (so lots of diminished), but I've never seen the augmented as "creepy" or "old fashioned" To me, it almost feels more like "I should be happy, but I'm not." Like getting a different answer to a question you thought you knew the answer to. Then again, I'm pretty much obsessed with the idea of "emotions of musical keys" which a lot of people say doesn't exist at all. (It's all just wavelengths!). Eh, for a guy whose main influences are metal 'n' Mahler, emotion is a big thing for me. If you want to simplify it that major is "happy" and minor is "sad," augmented is screaming at you that it will never let you see it cry, while tears stream down it's face. So I definitely get the "uncomfortable" part.

    • @dennmillsch
      @dennmillsch Před 11 měsíci

      Yes, minor chords can easily come across as sad or angry or other emotions. I think of augmented the same way. Maybe it's weird or awkward in some settings. But it can tug your heartstrings in other settings, or downright sweet, or a kinda slapping you in the face to listen up

    • @lazarlol4132
      @lazarlol4132 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Augmented chords seem generally dramatic to me.

    • @dicknorton2
      @dicknorton2 Před 8 měsíci

      I agree. I hear something like 'pretty, sad.'

  • @_zeoliamusic
    @_zeoliamusic Před 3 lety

    Liked and subscribed! I've been studying music for years, and even did jazz band in school for six years, and none of my instructors went this in-depth into the chord theory around augmented chords/triads and modality surrounding them! I'm a huge fan of getting technical with chords and how to implement them into a piece or song, so I appreciate the attention to detail you put into this. I'm a singer/songwriter and guitarist myself, so I'm always looking for new and different concepts to try to incorporate into what I write. The feel of augmented chords has always felt very space-like, like you're floating without solid ground beneath you, and learning from this that you can restabilize the feeling by using it as a dominant to the grounded, "home" tonic, that blew my mind. Thank you!!

  • @delusionwalker8852
    @delusionwalker8852 Před 3 lety +22

    Augmented and diminished chords are one of mine all time favourite because of how much you can do with them and their sound you can create. I must say, you have managed to show a lot in such nice structure way about them in just 15 minutes that it's just impressive.
    Thank you !

  • @frankiesunswept
    @frankiesunswept Před 3 lety +150

    Damn babies collage over Lydian Aug is insanely hilarious

    • @xMRxLAMAx
      @xMRxLAMAx Před 3 lety +8

      I didn’t sense too much creepiness, personally
      But it did make me wonder if those babies were up to something tho

    • @voronOsphere
      @voronOsphere Před 3 lety +5

      Baby You Know Who had me in stitches!!!!

    • @Izzythedestryr
      @Izzythedestryr Před 3 lety +6

      It made feel like they had been kidnapped

    • @guitarrefreak
      @guitarrefreak Před 3 lety +3

      in my head i am just thinking "please, just make it stop, then ... yoda"

    • @MajorSeventh
      @MajorSeventh Před 3 lety +2

      Also works with kitten pictures.

  • @sinx2247
    @sinx2247 Před 2 lety +14

    There is also a type of augmented chord called the blackadder chord which is occasionally used in J-pop, where the bass note is a whole step above one of the tones in the augmented chord. The bass note usually resolves down by a half step, for example you could have Caug/F# approach Fmaj.

  • @larrytrincia1738
    @larrytrincia1738 Před 2 lety +4

    Jake, I marvel at the grasp you have on many musical concepts. Not only that, you have a gift of presenting complex ideas in a simple and understandable way. There are those that can play music but cannot teach. There are those that can teach music that can't play. You are the rare bird that can both play and teach. It is simply a joy to listen and learn from you.

  • @deadmanwithpitchforkarms8376

    You don't have a clue on how much joy watching your stuff brings me. I always like the videos before I even begin watching them because your musical knowledge, your teaching habilities, your musicianship and your sense of humour are all top-notch and I haven't been let down by your content since I found your channel a few months ago. Your videos always spark new ideas I want to explore, and this desire to create always shakes me off from the anxiety and depression. For someone who struggles with lots of stuff like I do, it's one of the most incredible feelings I can feel. Thank you so much.

    • @Fogertian
      @Fogertian Před 3 lety

      What it makes me learn .... is When He smiles while talking .... it's like saying ALL THE TIME ... "It's a piece of cake !!!"

  • @chrisharper80
    @chrisharper80 Před 3 lety +17

    One of my favorites is the jazz standard “Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans”. The verse starts Cmaj7 / G7#5 / Cmaj7 / Am7. To me, it adds a feeling of longing or even daydreaming that fits the song really well. I really like the Harry Connick Jr. and Dr. John version. Of course, the first that came to mind was exactly the one you mentioned: “Oh Darling”. I would also like to point out that the Eagles used the exact same turnaround in “Please come home for Christmas”, which is almost a chord-for-chord rip-off of “Oh Darling”. Every Christmas, I make a point to sing the lyrics for “Oh Darling” over the top of it until my wife gets annoyed and makes me stop. 🙃

    • @Funkybassuk
      @Funkybassuk Před 2 lety +3

      The Eagles didn’t write Please Come Home For Christmas. It’s a cover of a 1960 blues song by Charles Brown. The Beatles probably learnt it in Hamburg in ‘62 then borrowed it a few years later.

  • @jimjohnston6848
    @jimjohnston6848 Před 11 měsíci

    I am learning SO much from you, my friend! I have been playing for decades, but never really paid attention to how to show other people what I am connecting together. Thank you so very much.

  • @lualhatilualhati
    @lualhatilualhati Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for the info! 💛
    I really appreciate you giving context and exploring different ideas!

  • @abuzzedwhaler7949
    @abuzzedwhaler7949 Před 3 lety +4

    Jake you haven't a clue how long I've been waiting for this video. Thank you my bro

  • @anonymousgoat2837
    @anonymousgoat2837 Před 3 lety +27

    4:14
    Replay button for Jake’s Oh! Darling.

  • @MooseLeader1
    @MooseLeader1 Před rokem

    Love your deep dives into stuff like this. It is a HUGE help expanding my musical knowledge after 40+ years messing around with it.

  • @JamwithJamal
    @JamwithJamal Před 2 lety +3

    You are so generous that you share everything about things that took you quite some time to figure out. I can't thank you enough. 11:48 when you started playing this augmented lydian scale I kind of felt how you felt, you said indistinct but I heard you kind of wanna say an indescribable beauty, a moment before tears can stream out because of all that mystery... anyways so lovely and beautiful 🥰💖

  • @astubbornonly
    @astubbornonly Před 3 lety +16

    The little arpeggio that plays throughout in the video reminds me of "Music of the Spheres" from Portal 2

  • @mattd8325
    @mattd8325 Před 3 lety +11

    6:38 & 8:15 - you're not imagining it, it's definitely an old time style. A great example of this is in the song 'Just like starting over' by John Lennon (in the last part of the intro and outro). It goes A - Aaug - F#m/A - A7 - D - Dm. The A7 creates even more tension to go to the D. Beautiful use of Chromatic movement. These arms of mine by Otis Redding also uses this progression in the chorus but I think it's in the key of A# rather than A. Thanks for sharing this Jake!

    • @fiscaldisco5234
      @fiscaldisco5234 Před 2 lety

      I was going to comment the same thing. I love that aug sound in Starting over!

  • @philipwacker4629
    @philipwacker4629 Před 2 lety +1

    You're a hero. Informative, chill, and good humor. Also, thanks to the patreons. This is the golden tier of youtube.

  • @colinspear
    @colinspear Před 8 měsíci

    amazingly clear and helpful video. thanks so much

  • @MusicTheoryForGuitar
    @MusicTheoryForGuitar Před 3 lety +193

    My subscribers sent me here. Seems like we both published a video on Augmented chords together. Musical minds think alike? :-)

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +48

      Seriously what are the odds?!

    • @MusicTheoryForGuitar
      @MusicTheoryForGuitar Před 3 lety +97

      @@SignalsMusicStudio I just realized... your last name is Lizzio. My last name is Zillio. This is getting weirder...

    • @avvvqvvv99
      @avvvqvvv99 Před 3 lety +31

      @@MusicTheoryForGuitar a collab is meant to be

    • @cactustactics
      @cactustactics Před 3 lety +56

      @@MusicTheoryForGuitar once you find Ozilli the triangle of thirds will be complete and the gateway to Augmentia will be unsealed! you don't know what you're dealing with here!!!

    • @heidiedelman6840
      @heidiedelman6840 Před 3 lety +6

      Cool, I noticed that. I got both of you guys on my feed. Great stuff.

  • @BirthQuakeRecords
    @BirthQuakeRecords Před 3 lety +15

    Every time I click on one of your videos, I think "what the hell is this video even going to be about, I've never heard of this" and then I quickly realize "oh dang, I've been trying to figure out what this musical concept was for years and years but never had the language to even know how to talk about it or look it up!" Seriously, every single time. Thanks so much for making music make more sense.

  • @Benjamin-1989
    @Benjamin-1989 Před 2 lety

    you explain so well and the graphics help a lot

  • @AndyMinchew
    @AndyMinchew Před 2 lety

    Jake you do a wonderful job teaching. I have watched a lot of guitar lessons on YT and by far your the best!

  • @DontKillAnts
    @DontKillAnts Před 3 lety +13

    13:20-13:55 reminded me so much of "Don't Leave Me Now" from The Wall.

    • @educostanzo
      @educostanzo Před 3 lety +1

      Nice catch, it really has a similar vibe.

    • @Wind-nj5xz
      @Wind-nj5xz Před 3 lety +1

      Also kinda reminds me of "Werships" by Portal

  • @nocturnallsnake4228
    @nocturnallsnake4228 Před 3 lety +8

    One of my fav teachers told me long ago: go crazy and put any junk you want on the dominant that everything works fine when reaching the tonic.

  • @annupborrge6273
    @annupborrge6273 Před 3 lety

    I simply love your teaching jake. Thanks a lot. Ur channel deserves more subscribers 🙏

  • @jeddak
    @jeddak Před 2 lety

    Great video. You are a very good theory teacher, you make the concepts accessible, relatable, understandable, and you give practical advice along with the information. Thank you!

  • @adamscriven9682
    @adamscriven9682 Před 3 lety +18

    As well as "Oh Darling" that chord also acts as as the intro to the much earlier Beatles song "All I've got to Do". I usually play those two song back-to-back but never knew what the chord was called! Thank you!😁

    • @deathshead357
      @deathshead357 Před 3 lety +2

      It's also the last chord in the opening D minor sequence of The Beatles "She's So Heavy".

  • @Katatopianos
    @Katatopianos Před 3 lety +12

    Lydian Augmented is actually a beautiful sound and is used in jazz quite frequently.

  • @mondrian5620
    @mondrian5620 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You’re an awesome instructor. I really appreciate you making these videos as I’ve learned a lot from them. Thank you!

  • @hisroyalness2
    @hisroyalness2 Před rokem

    Very well done on the instruction - and the video specialties are magnificent. Love them all.

  • @tedl7538
    @tedl7538 Před 2 lety +13

    Not mentioned in this video is how, in modern jazz harmony, augmented fifths are very often part of voicings (frequently referred to as flatted 13ths) which provide a beautiful characteristic richness and texture which is not in any way "weird," "uncomfortable," "awkward" or "puzzling."

  • @josephsanjay4806
    @josephsanjay4806 Před 3 lety +3

    Best lesson on augmented chords I have seen yet.

  • @OsbornIOW
    @OsbornIOW Před 3 lety

    Jake I love the way you describe the topics you cover ... Thank you

  • @reflecting6189
    @reflecting6189 Před 3 lety

    loved playing along with this video. great video

  • @RC32Smiths01
    @RC32Smiths01 Před 3 lety +8

    Aug Chords are a really mysterious and deeper way to say the same thing in my opinion. You could take the normal route, or you can take the aug route when it comes to chord progression. Aug Chords are something everyone should try!

  • @bananafriends1847
    @bananafriends1847 Před 3 lety +53

    Augmented chords always give me a mystery and sacred vibe

    • @jyotektosgaimur
      @jyotektosgaimur Před 3 lety +2

      I love augmented chords. Listen to take a bow by muse. That song is chocked full of aug chords.

    • @nikelodeon6852
      @nikelodeon6852 Před 3 lety +2

      Also literally the entire king crimson catalogue..

  • @JamMasterJR
    @JamMasterJR Před rokem

    Love your knowledge, explanations, and sense of humor. You are a joy to learn from.

  • @piperpan5516
    @piperpan5516 Před 3 lety

    This was a great lesson, it really opened me to a better understanding of the Augmented sound and really opens the door to comprehending it's function. Great video and really well laid out visually. Thanks brother :-)

  • @spicybill
    @spicybill Před 3 lety +62

    I thought that scale was actually very beautiful, not scary.

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +23

      I don't know if I'd use the word scary... I'd say it's uncertain/suspended/ambigous/disconnected

    • @spicybill
      @spicybill Před 3 lety +11

      @@SignalsMusicStudio yeah I like that feeling

    • @voronOsphere
      @voronOsphere Před 3 lety +2

      I think it's beautiful in an INDIANA JONES kind of way- exotic & mysterious...

    • @argh01hass
      @argh01hass Před 3 lety +3

      This is what I wanted to say - Lydian sounds beautiful and mysterious, not at all uncomfortable to me.

    • @voronOsphere
      @voronOsphere Před 3 lety +2

      @@argh01hass I agree! Even the diatonic tritone in Lydian is beautiful and isn't disturbing or uncomfortable at all.

  • @DanielTartarottiSobrosa
    @DanielTartarottiSobrosa Před 3 lety +3

    The brazilian band "Nenhum de nós" uses exactly the A A+ Bm E in their song called "Eu não entendo"... it's an amazing chord progression!

  • @ajknote3347
    @ajknote3347 Před 2 lety +2

    I decided to study something other than music in college and was upset about all the theory I wanted to learn, but honestly these videos along with some decent ear training and lessons on an instrument of choice is enough to accomplish everything I want to in music still. So glad that stuff like this exists for free.

  • @Wheelhousebandetx
    @Wheelhousebandetx Před 2 lety

    Now this was a unique and very helpful vid. I never really thought about augmented chords as much. I will be incorporating them into my songwriting going forward. Thanks!

  • @threee1298
    @threee1298 Před 3 lety +4

    "how do you use a chord that sounds like ~this~" lol you JUST did it man sounded pretty good

  • @dang5874
    @dang5874 Před 3 lety +6

    For a tonal example, Rachmaninoff has tons (e.g., his Etude-Tableaux op. 39, no. 9 with his developed chromatic language, Chochieva's or Haryoudinoff's recordings recommended). Also, Muse also has several songs with augmented chords, being Rachmaninoff an influence for Matthew Bellamy (e.g., Exogenesis Symphony, lol)

    • @flavy1000
      @flavy1000 Před rokem

      You are right, especially on Muse...That's the point which makes Muse make the listener , uncomfortably comfortable and,..adicted!

    • @allach_mclanlin
      @allach_mclanlin Před rokem

      Yo, thank you. Rach-y isn't my usual hang, so I appreciate this as a case study.

  • @mehmetizbul2099
    @mehmetizbul2099 Před 3 lety

    Dude your videos are like decent harmony/theory lessons. Really helpful :) Thank you

  • @andyhinds542
    @andyhinds542 Před 3 lety

    Your music lessons are incredible!

  • @frmcf
    @frmcf Před 3 lety +11

    Lydian augmented: “If you’re in a film score or some other cinematic thing, or Rick Beato’s instagram feed, I’m the mode for you!”

  • @rocketpost1
    @rocketpost1 Před 3 lety +11

    Hi Jake, you're too young to remember Buddy Holly's Raining in my Heart back in the late 50s but it contains an augmented chord. The progression is D D+ Bm D7 and it's simple but effective. It's not too far away from Dear Prudence either. Also George Harrison's Something has a lovely change from Bm to F#+ . I think that the augmented chord is used more than you give it credit for. One of my favourite chords is the augmented seventh eg F#+ 2X233X which resolves nicely to Bm7. Nice lesson.

    • @tommybotts
      @tommybotts Před měsícem

      Eddie Money's song Baby Hold On To Me starts out similar to this progression. It's a D D+ D6 D7.

  • @HaliPuppeh
    @HaliPuppeh Před 3 lety

    This is an awesome video. I'm a composer as well and augmented chords are the one thing that's glossed over so much in theory and composition courses. Thank you very much for this.

  • @timaddison307
    @timaddison307 Před 2 lety

    I mean how this just rolls out of his head so easily. amazing to this level of understanding to the point that you can explain it so well

  • @SoleaGalilei
    @SoleaGalilei Před 3 lety +8

    The augmented babies cracked me up. Great video!

  • @zoro789
    @zoro789 Před 2 lety +4

    there really are only 4 augmented chords.
    i never thought about it like that, so thanks for pointing that out! :)

  • @audioware1
    @audioware1 Před 3 lety

    Excellent stuff dude!!!
    The extra B# lower in E+ just makes my ear cry :D

  • @albertorod10
    @albertorod10 Před 2 lety

    Thanks to you , for share your tought and knoledge, you are helping me to undertand a lot more on Theory.

  • @lewissalter9665
    @lewissalter9665 Před 2 lety +3

    this goes a lot deeper then just music. music, colour theory and fractal mathematics can all be created by base 7 mathematics. on top of that, for the individuals who really want to jump down the rabbit hole, there is a book called "interference: a grand scientific musical theory". I highly recommend it.

  • @MaxwellKozen
    @MaxwellKozen Před 3 lety +11

    I cannot NOT hear “O Canada we stand on guard for thee” every time he goes from the major 1 to the augmented version of that chord.

  • @goveriusmylliemumlongchann4207

    Search on youtube about how to use augmented chord in chord progressions I find this video of yours which really help me. I must say thank you for this video. It really supportive and informative.

  • @bevansmith3210
    @bevansmith3210 Před 3 lety

    Jake your channel is so awesome! Amazing musical education.

  • @fatamorgana1006
    @fatamorgana1006 Před 3 lety +6

    Oh man, those baby pictures around 12:38 "For just 1 dollar a day you could finance a meal for one of these poor children...."

  • @GeorgeSPAMTindle
    @GeorgeSPAMTindle Před 3 lety +16

    Whenever you hear an augmented chord in a Beatles' song you can be sure that George Harrison put it in there, even though he doesn't always get the credit for it.
    Great video and lesson, thank you. This is my first time here and I will now subscribe to your channel, you are like Rick Beato for the slower learners. Anyone familiar with Rick Beato's channel will understand that that last comment is a compliment to both channels.

    • @deathshead357
      @deathshead357 Před 3 lety +5

      I think George was more a fan of the diminished chord. John Lennon uses the Augmented chord in "Just like starting over" from his final album, "Double Fantasy".

  • @beckst3r
    @beckst3r Před 2 lety

    i love your videos so much. please never stop doing what you're doing.

  • @kieranpocock2885
    @kieranpocock2885 Před 2 lety

    These videos are always so incredibly helpful and interesting. Thanks 👍🎶

  • @adrianshawuk
    @adrianshawuk Před 3 lety +8

    Was that “Reefer Madness” I spotted there?

  • @NeelDhar
    @NeelDhar Před 3 lety +5

    Jake my man, you're such a great teacher! My teacher taught me similar things about the diminished scale, and i was blown away. It never struck me to try and replicate the same thing with Aug chords are they too have a similar sense of symmetry.
    Your videos are great, I often re-watch your video on Polyrhythms just because how great is. In fact, today's video was so good, I'm going to go and re-watch that video. Keep up the great work!!
    Edit: The Hemiola One - czcams.com/video/HhODahQ-U4U/video.html

  • @scottmckenna9164
    @scottmckenna9164 Před 2 lety

    Happy to put in a good word for you! You are one of my favorite teacher's. The announcer's voice is a bonus! Carry on note playin' fellow.

  • @FabirukaS
    @FabirukaS Před 3 lety

    Always great topics and a great teacher behind those to explain them!

  • @wido123123
    @wido123123 Před 3 lety +62

    Music Theory for guitar just released this same topic today....are you guys secretly trying to break our brains?? this is too much augmented for one day....oh, right, we're 2020....

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +33

      Weird! Just like Aug chords!

    • @meadish
      @meadish Před 3 lety +14

      Augmented August

    • @kactus_3008
      @kactus_3008 Před 3 lety +1

      I'd bet that before these awkward times, stuff like that was best kept trade secret...Know it is free, like programming courses, history lessons, etc. I think it is a matter of open you mind now or feel miserable for life.

  • @facepalmjesus1608
    @facepalmjesus1608 Před 3 lety +16

    its very peculiar that symmetry in music sounds weird... (aug , dim , wholetone...)

    • @stein0niets
      @stein0niets Před 3 lety +16

      its because the overtone series is not linear. and thus the tonal centre is unclear.

    • @Gabriel-mw5ro
      @Gabriel-mw5ro Před 3 lety +3

      In 12-TET

    • @bragtime1052
      @bragtime1052 Před 3 lety +2

      To add on to what the two persons above me said, when our ears hear musical intervals, they calculate the higher Hz pitch divided by the lower Hz pitch and try to interpret what they're hearing as the closest fraction, such as when we hear a perfect fifth, that's very close to a 3/2 interval (like 300 Hz against 200 Hz), when we hear a major third, that's pretty close to a 5/4 interval (like 125 Hz against 100 Hz), etc. The simpler the fraction the musical interval sounds like, the more consonant it'll sound to our ears. So intervals like 2/1, 3/2, 4/3, 5/4, 6/5, and 9/8 are the octave, perfect fifth, perfect fourth, major third, minor third, and major second respectively, and all of those musical intervals sound nice and consonant to our ears.
      But when we play musical instruments, we're not actually playing those exact fractions. For the past two hundred or so years, western society has used what's called 12 equal divisions of the octave (shortened as 12edo), where, as the name suggests, you take the octave (which is the interval 2/1, a very simple and super consonant interval) and split that octave into twelve equally spaced parts. By dividing the octave into twelve equally spaced parts, we end up with twelve different intervals, and believe it or not, besides the octave, none of the other intervals are exact fractions, meaning they're all slightly out of tune from the pure intervals (which are referred to as "just" intervals, meaning pure). Some of those 12edo intervals closely approximate some of the fractions I mentioned above. More specifically, the 12edo octave is by definition perfectly in-tune since it's exactly the interval 2/1, the 12edo perfect fifth and 12edo perfect fourth are almost identical to the intervals 3/2 and 4/3 respectively, and so they sound super consonant because they sound like those intervals, the 12edo major second is very close to the interval 9/8, and so it sounds somewhat consonant, the 12edo major third and 12edo minor third are a bit off from 5/4 and 6/5 respectively, and so when you listen closely to a major or minor third interval on say the piano then you can hear some wobbling since it's not perfectly in-tune with the just intervals they approximate to our ears. The major sixth and minor sixth roughly approximate the intervals 5/3 and 8/5, but just like the major and minor third (in fact, just like the major and minor third since the minor sixth and major sixth are simply inversions of those two intervals, so they're the same exact amount out-of-tune from just tuning as their inversions), but even though they're kinda off from just, just like the 12edo major third (roughly 5/4) and the 12edo minor third (roughly 6/5), to our ears they approximate simple/not complicated intervals, so they still sound pretty consonant even though they're kinda off and thus sound kinda wobbly when you play them on an instrument (that wobbliness is out-of-tuneness).
      At this point, you might be thinking, "how can musical intervals in our tuning (12edo) be considered out-of-tune? Aren't they perfectly in-tune?" Well ya see, if we tried to use perfectly in-tune musical intervals (fractions), the math would get ugly really fast because for example in 12edo (the tuning we use), when you stack a perfect fifth on top of itself 12 times, you perfectly line back up exactly seven octaves up (at the same note name you started with at the bottom). But if you tune those perfect fifths exactly to the interval 3/2, you actually don't get seven octaves up (which represented as a fraction would be (2/1, the octave) times itself (2/1) seven times, which gives you 128/1, which is the interval seven octaves up is. But if you stack twelve 3/2 perfect fifths, you actually multiply 3/2 by itself 12 times, which doesn't give you a clean octave of 128/1, but instead 531441/4096, which is a little sharper than seven octaves up, and would sound really dissonant if you played that interval on an instrument, such as the piano.
      So we use the tuning 12edo so that the math doesn't get all ugly and dissonant from stacking fractions on top of each other, but as a result, everything except for octaves are by definition at least slightly out-of-tune. For instance, perfect fifths sound really locked in and that's why power chords sound so supported, since the 12edo perfect fifth very closely approximates the interval 3/2. But 12edo major thirds are noticeably sharp from the interval 5/4, and so because they're distorted up somewhat higher than 5/4, our ears hear them as somewhat out-of-tune, and so they don't sound as supported nor "locked-in" as perfect fifths, and if you played a major third on the piano and listened closely, you can definitely hear wobbliness from it since it's a bit out-of-tune.
      So we use the tuning 12edo so that the math doesn't get all ugly from stacking fractions on top of each other, but as a result, everything except for octaves aren't perfectly in-tune, but instead "approximations" (which means they approximate just intervals, like the 12edo major third approximates the interval 5/4 even though the 12edo major third does not exactly equal 5/4, it's a little too high).
      And so at first thought, you'd think that symmetry in music would sound good to our ears, but that doesn't actually ring true since the most consonant chords are things like major triads like C E G which are definitely not symmetrical, but noticeably asymmetrical compared to an augmented or diminished chord. But with a major triad, the notes C and E are a major third that approximate the interval 5/4, which is simple and thus consonant to our ears, and the notes C and G are a perfect fifth that approximate the interval 3/2, which is simple and thus very consonant to our ears as well, and so a major triad sounds consonant and pleasing to our ears. But an augmented triad does not approximate simple intervals but instead giant complicated ones with those three notes together, nor does a diminished triad or tetrad approximate simple intervals but instead giant complicated ones too, so even though those chords sound symmetrical in pitch to our ears, symmetrical pitch does not equal consonance, and so the most consonant chords like a major triad or a minor triad are actually asymmetrical instead.

    • @yessir6427
      @yessir6427 Před 3 lety

      @@bragtime1052 wow great read

  • @arxaaron
    @arxaaron Před 2 lety

    Thanks! I find your presentation style exceptionally pleasant and easy to follow. This augmented my understanding of chording in a major way, which is no minor accomplishment. :-). Off to the piano and vibes mow to explore the augmentation dimension... ..

  • @ErickWendelTraining
    @ErickWendelTraining Před 3 lety

    OMG What a video! Your Motifs + this video has been helping me a lot to compose songs better! Thanks a lot

  • @Wind-nj5xz
    @Wind-nj5xz Před 3 lety +3

    3:00 *EAUG*

  • @Wind-nj5xz
    @Wind-nj5xz Před 3 lety +6

    Jake: "What if i told you we can have a whole tonality that is built around that augmened chord?"
    Also Jake: *chooses lydian augmented*
    Augmented scale: Am i a joke to you?

  • @randomryguy8453
    @randomryguy8453 Před 2 lety

    Your the best teacher and narrator ! Thanks for your stuff please never stop

  • @PIEKART2001
    @PIEKART2001 Před 2 lety

    Dude, you're a machine. Superb tutorial and delivery

  • @matiasgrasset1131
    @matiasgrasset1131 Před 3 lety +7

    Dont leave me know by Pink Floyd uses a C+ chord and changes the bass note. Amazing song.

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +5

      Also in Us and Them- the third chord in the sequence can be parsed as a DmMaj7 or an aug triad played over D. Great to hear how the sax plays over that chord!

    • @drulemon
      @drulemon Před 3 lety +2

      I’m pretty sure that Dogs has an augmented chord as well

    • @user-km1zq4ro9h
      @user-km1zq4ro9h Před 3 lety +1

      @@drulemon yep, it has one

  • @frmcf
    @frmcf Před 3 lety +3

    Sounds like we’re at the ‘Enchantment under the sea’ dance.

  • @richardguittar4908
    @richardguittar4908 Před 2 lety

    I have watched many of your videos and am always impressed. You are like the Houdini of musicology. I honestly cannot play guitar and sing simultaneously, but you play really complicated stuff off the cuff and carry on a complicated conversation at the same time, with little or no hesitation. Your head must be like running processors in parallel. I'm amazed, but probably at the wrong stuff. Love your videos.

  • @guitar9310
    @guitar9310 Před 3 lety

    Great vid! Its like using a diminished chord to navigate to other keys or just lead towards other notes in the key!

  • @beastzerkerjet
    @beastzerkerjet Před 3 lety +7

    i like those scales and chords that aren't major or minor, they aren't telling me how to feel... and i appreciate that.

    • @meadowlaguira9997
      @meadowlaguira9997 Před 3 lety

      Yes they are, or haven't you been listening to Jake. They're supposed to make you feel " weird".

  • @justanotherfishinbikinibot6060

    6:31 isn't e# none existent? i'm really confused, can anyone please explain?

    • @regolithia
      @regolithia Před 3 lety +5

      Enharmonic spellings! In some cases B# and E# are used for certain chords/scales that have a sharpened E or a B! That’s how I understand it, at least

    • @justanotherfishinbikinibot6060
      @justanotherfishinbikinibot6060 Před 3 lety +1

      so there are scales that have these kinds of notes? i didn't know that, but thanks for telling :)

    • @SignalsMusicStudio
      @SignalsMusicStudio  Před 3 lety +7

      sometimes it's "correct" to call the F note an "E sharp" instead.

    • @user-km1zq4ro9h
      @user-km1zq4ro9h Před 3 lety +1

      that tonality has F# already, so E# replaces F

    • @cactustactics
      @cactustactics Před 3 lety +8

      E# just means "the note half a step above an E". Usually we'd just call that "F", but sometimes you want to say "I took the E in this scale and raised it half a step", so calling it E# can make it clearer what you've done
      And like the person above me says, you already have a note spelled with an F in the scale (the 6th, F#), and we usually want one of each - so it makes more sense to keep your 5th written as an E note, just adjusted with the appropriate sharps or flats

  • @davyydsummers
    @davyydsummers Před 2 lety

    Outstanding lecture as usual. I really like the graphic of the four triangles to show the four aug chords. It could be an album cover.

  • @richelliott13
    @richelliott13 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic lesson really interesting and entertaining 🤩 I will follow!