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JOIN THE DISCORD VIEW THREADBelow the video there is a "Recordings" button. Click on it and choose "Video" so you can watch itIs there a video I can't see?
I've noticed this in more posts, but just thought they were deleted.
Really? I noticed when I was playing along the video and the sound didn't match the tabGood eye that's 2 years of people that missed that one
Below the video there is a "Recordings" button. Click on it and choose "Video" so you can watch it
Go the the lesson section above. Then for this particular lesson you can chose either synthetic or video from the audio options.Is that supposed to be in this post or am I looking at the wrong place? View attachment 33
Go the the lesson section above. Then for this particular lesson you can chose either synthetic or video from the audio options.
Could you clarify what you mean? In principle Arpeggios are broken chords so not every chord from the G major family will work by definition you can play G over Em7 but G. If there is a significant amount of notes of the chord you're playing over yes it will work if there are notes in there that clash too much you should probably stay away from them a little bit.Awesome lesson. I suppose that I could play all G major chord family arpeggios over E minor too ,right? Since its the relative minor.
I mean. All the arpeggios learned in the single postion. Could all of them be applied to an E minor songCould you clarify what you mean? In principle Arpeggios are broken chords so not every chord from the G major family will work by definition you can play G over Em7 but G. If there is a significant amount of notes of the chord you're playing over yes it will work if there are notes in there that clash too much you should probably stay away from them a little bit.
Aah in that sense. Yeah you could apply all these Arpeggios in an E minor song but you can't use all of them over an Em chord. Basically the application of these Arpeggios works the same as you would apply any Arpeggio over a chord. If you have an Em you can use G over it because G has the notes D, G and B in it. D can sound a bit out but like good out. All the others have one or two notes that sound really out over the Em so they will not really work.I mean. All the arpeggios learned in the single postion. Could all of them be applied to an E minor song
Gotcha! Thanks mate!Aah in that sense. Yeah you could apply all these Arpeggios in an E minor song but you can't use all of them over an Em chord. Basically the application of these Arpeggios works the same as you would apply any Arpeggio over a chord. If you have an Em you can use G over it because G has the notes D, G and B in it. D can sound a bit out but like good out. All the others have one or two notes that sound really out over the Em so they will not really work.
That they are in the same position does not by definition mean you can use all of them over the same chord but you can do cool things with it when the chord changes.
The goal is a melodic exploration of the keyboard
Uh yeah, meant fretboard of course.Nice idea, but didn't you mean "fretboard"?
Initial ear training is usually intervals, you can find some of those for free on the internet. What works with chords is usually just play them a lot and listen, at least that's how it works for me. After a while I have audio memory or whatever you want to call itHey hope everyone is doing great!
I read the syn's comments on the video which stated that the sound of each chord has to be memorized. Can anyone help me with some good ear training exercises to work on the same?