Transcripts
1. Music Theory is a Tool, Not a Rule: [MUSIC] Music theory is not a set of rules
that you can't break. Music theory is a set of tools that allow
you to do things. If you're playing an
instrument, if you're singing, if you're a songwriter, music theory will help you
be better at your craft. My name is Solo Ray, I've been producing
music since I was 15. I spent a lot of time
performing music live in front of people and
I've spent a lot of time creating music. I want to show you
how the theory of music makes each of
those processes easier. In this course,
we're going to get an overview of music
theory as a whole, what the different concepts are, how they work together, and how you can take
advantage of them. We're going to go
over scales, chords, different modes, inversions, the circle of fifths,
the number system. Having a basic understanding
of these tools brings such crazy value
to you as a musician, a songwriter, a vocalist. Whatever angle you're
approaching music from, it is absolutely vital to at least be familiar
with these systems, so get your notebooks out, get your notes app out, let's go through
this stuff together, and I promise you you're
going to learn so much.
2. Before We Begin: [MUSIC] Who is this class for? I would say any
sort of musician. If you play any instruments and especially if
you're a vocalist, I think vocalists stand to gain a tremendous amount from an understanding
of music theory. We're not going to dive too much into rhythm in this course, this is geared more towards
the harmony of music theory. Rhythm is a beautiful world that I'm very passionate
about but I thought, for sake of clarity and focus, it'd be helpful to only
talk about harmony for this course and leave
rhythm for its own section. I would say too, if you feel overwhelmed by any
aspect of music theory, if it just seems too much to understand or you just feel
so lost, push through. Push through, just like how the best way to learn a
language is immersing yourself in the culture and even if you don't understand all the words that
are being said, as you spend time in that environment and
in that culture, you will start to
pick up the language as you start to use it, and you start to listen to it, you start to pick it up. Music theory is the same way. Even if you don't understand
all of the terms right away, just let it wash over you. Keep pushing through and some elements will start
to click together, especially when you
start listening and trying to identify things. If a concept, in particular, feels just way too
over your head, feel free to skip to the next video or
feel free to slow it down or just watch it again until you feel comfortable
and then you can move on. But push through that phase
of feeling overwhelmed. Because music is a language, the best way to learn
is by immersion. With that out of the way, let's dive in and start
learning about intervals.
3. Intervals: [MUSIC] The first concept I think you should be familiar with when getting into the world of music theory is the
idea of intervals. Now an interval is just the
distance between two notes. Any chord will have a
combination of intervals. Any melody will be broken up into different intervals
stepping between each other. [MUSIC] Those are just
intervals between them. Let's start with some examples. Now we can just
do a single note. [NOISE] Great, that's C,
that's not an interval. It's just a note, a good
baseline to start from. If we go one whole step
up, that's an interval. [NOISE] That's a second. I'm moving to the second note, it's the second interval. Now if I go another whole step from our C to that third step, that would be a third interval because I'm moving to
the third note away. I'm just staying on the white
keys and the QC for now. If we go one more, that'd be all the way to F, that's a fourth and
so on and so forth. A fifth, sixth, seventh and the
eighth, or the octave. Octave just means eight, so it's eight steps. Great. That's most of the
intervals that there are. There are other variations
that will surface in time, but that's a great
stepping point to then talk about the other building
block of music theory, which is what do we
make with intervals? We build scales with them, and that's what
we're going to talk about in the next video.
4. Scales: [MUSIC] So what
exactly are scales? Scales are simply
a subset of notes. In our Western music system, there are 12 notes
available to us, and a scale is a subset of
those notes, usually seven. The major scale, specifically, the C major scale, is, I think the easiest
one to start with and understanding because
if you look at a piano, it's very easy to see. It's just the white notes. So it's pretty easy to tell which notes are a
part of that scale and which ones aren't. This is what the C major
scale sounds like. [MUSIC] You're probably familiar with that sound if you've
done any vocal warm-ups or have been in any
rehearsal rooms, or practiced an instrument
anything like that. It's very, very common
and very typical because most of our music
stems from this scale, they're just different
placements of it, and there's a pattern
that determines why those specific
notes are chosen. It's whole, whole, half. Whole, whole, whole, half. In our last video we talked
about intervals and I mentioned the major
second interval , the second interval. [MUSIC] That's from
the first note of the scale to the
second note of the scale. You'll notice there's a
black key in-between those. [MUSIC] Because we're skipping over that black key to
get to our second note, it's called a whole step. Now, if we go up the
scale a little bit from our third note to our fourth note from
E to F right here, [MUSIC] you'll notice
there are no black keys between E and F. That interval
is called a half step. It's not a whole step, it's a half step because there are zero notes
in-between them. [MUSIC] To make a major scale, we just have to follow the
pattern of whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. Starting from C,
[MUSIC] whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. Using that pattern, we can pick any notes and figure out what the scale
would be for that note. Starting on E, [MUSIC] I might not know any
of the names of these notes, but I know what the major scale should be just by
following the whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half pattern. [MUSIC] Whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. If you play an instrument
practicing scales and just drilling them
over and over, going up, going down is one of the
best ways that you can instill in your brain what the sound of the major
scale should be. Probably the most
helpful thing for learning intervals is just knowing where they're
placed in the scale, what a sixth sounds like, what a third sounds like. Drilling scales will help
drill that stuff into your brain the more you listen
and perform these scales. Singing them is another
fantastic way to develop your singing
ability and to develop your musical theory
too of knowing where those intervals are as you
sing them over and over again, a fantastic vocal warm-up. In the next video, we're
going to look at how to take that scale and using those subset of notes to
create chords out of that. Actually, start to
create harmony. That's coming up
in the next video.
5. Major Triads: [MUSIC] Chords. We're going to take our
existing C major scale, that we've looked at,
and we're going to take certain combinations
of those notes, and combine them
together into chords. The most common chord
shape that there is, is called the triad. There are as many triads as there are notes
in this scale. Seven different notes, there are seven different
triads that we can play. A triad is a combination
of three notes. Typically, it is
our first finger, our third finger, and our fifth finger,
all played together. [MUSIC] That's a triad. Because we're starting on C, Our first note is on C, that's a C major triad [MUSIC]. There are exceptions, but the lowest note of the
chord in this instance, when we're doing a chord
like this, with 1, 3, 5, that note is
called the root note. That's the note that
the base would play. That defines what the
name of the chord is. This is a C major chord [MUSIC]. Not every chord in the C
major scale is a major chord, but there are two
other major chords, the F major chord,
the fourth one. If we go up the scale
[MUSIC] to four, that's our F. If we start a
major chord from that note, from F [MUSIC], same shape, we have to C major, [MUSIC] 1,3, 5. If we start from F
[MUSIC], We get F major. The last major chord in
the key of C is G major. Just a whole step north
of that F [MUSIC], we have G. All of
those together, the C, the F, and the G, that gets us that blues
progression [MUSIC]. Now those are the major
chords in the C major scale, but there are four other chords. There's three minors, and something else that's
a little bit strange. We're going to take a look
at that in the next video.
6. Minor Triads: [MUSIC] Now what makes
a minor chord minor? Let's start with our
C major and then we will alter it into
a minor chord. This is the C major sound. [MUSIC] Now to make this chord a minor
what we're going to do is flat our third. So, our third note, our third finger, this E here. [MUSIC] We're going to
flat that by 1.5 step. We're going to move
our third finger on this E down to this E-flat here. [MUSIC] That chord
would be C minor. Now, the minor chord does occur naturally within
the C major scale. If we don't add any
alterations, no black notes, just stick to the white
notes, the key of C, that minor chord naturally
occurs in three places. If we make a triad
starting on D, you'll notice it is
a D minor chord. [MUSIC] D major would be
this if we raise the third. [MUSIC] But that
would be stepping outside the key of C. If we stay within the key of
C, we're with D minor. [MUSIC] It also occurs on
the third interval E minor. [MUSIC] It also occurs on
the sixth interval A minor. [MUSIC] Now, if we make a triad based off of B the seventh
note in the scale, we get something that isn't major and it isn't
quite minor either. [MUSIC] That's what's
called a diminished chord. To demonstrate what that
is if we start with A major chord with our C major, [MUSIC] we can make it minor
by flattening the third. [MUSIC] We can make it diminished by also
flattening the fifth. [MUSIC] Diminished chords are an acquired taste, I think. It takes a little bit of
finessing to get them to work in modern
music contexts. But when used appropriately and sparingly they can be
really, really effective. But most of the time, our chords are going
to be built off of those first six scale degrees. Next, we're going to talk
about how to actually take these chords and
flip them and invert them into different
forms and how to recognize what might sound like complex chords but are really just inversions of each other and that's
what we're going to learn in the next video.
7. Inversions: Let's talk about inversions. If we go back to
our C major triad, [MUSIC] it's built from three notes, like
we talked about, C, E, and G [MUSIC]. Now, just looking around
the rest of the piano, those three notes happen a
lot of other places as well. There's a C, E, G here [MUSIC], another one here [MUSIC], and another one
over here [MUSIC] There are a ton of C, E, G combinations and
inversion is when I take the bottom note of the chord
and move it to the top. Instead of C, E, G, the chord would be
built like this, E, G, C [MUSIC] as opposed to [MUSIC]. The one with the root
note on the bottom, that is called C major root position because the root is
on the bottom of the chord. [MUSIC] Our inverted position with the C on top and
the E on the bottom is called first inversion
because we have inverted that chord one time [MUSIC]. If we keep going and invert
it again by taking that E, putting that E on top
with the G on the bottom, we now have second inversion [MUSIC] C major root position, [MUSIC] C major first inversion, [MUSIC] C major second
inversion [MUSIC]. All of those [MUSIC]
chords sound like C major, and they are all C major. They just have their own
unique flavor to them, their own emotion that is slightly different
with each one, and being able to recognize those different inversions and still recognize
what the chord is. How we do that is
all about the base, and now for the next
lesson is about how to identify chords based
off of the base note. [MUSIC]
8. Bass: [MUSIC] Bass is the key to understanding what the chord actually is or what
its function is. No matter what instrument
is being played, the bass note of
that instrument is really going to define what
that chord sounds like. We can demonstrate this by
playing a C first inversion. [MUSIC] With our left hand
we'll play the bass note, which would be C because
it's a C major chord. [MUSIC] All of these inversions that we're going to do
with our right hand. We're going to keep
the bass on C. [MUSIC] That's how we can identify what the chords are
when listening to them. Even if we can't tell what
inversion is going on or maybe a piano is doing first inversion C. [MUSIC]
But a guitar is maybe doing a slightly
different version that's somewhere
else on the neck. That obviously it's not those same exact notes that
he's maybe playing this. [MUSIC] Then maybe there's a string section that's
playing just a fifth. [MUSIC] There's lots of different chord
voicings going on. But that bass note
is going to be the clearest indication
of what that chord is. [MUSIC] Even if we have all
this information going on, [MUSIC] that bass note is going to be the clearest way to identify what that chord is. Here's a little example of
what I'm talking about. I'm going to play the most
common chord progression that there is 1, 5, 6, 4. You've heard this
chord progression, even if you don't
think you have. I'll play it a couple
of different ways, using a couple of
different inversions. But listen to what the bass
is doing and how the bass very clearly communicates
what the chords are. [MUSIC] Another way. [MUSIC] Another way. [MUSIC] They all
sounded different, but the bass note
never changed and was exactly the same
regardless of whatever voicing was going on
in the upper register, the lower register
stayed exactly the same. That's a very easy way to
identify what these chords are. Before we get into how
to do that exactly, I think it'd be helpful
to learn why we would choose different
inversions on top. What the point of even
doing that would be? We're going to go
into that in the next video of how to use that as a tool to be more
emotive in the music.
9. Voice Leading: [MUSIC] Voice leading is
the concept of playing chords in a way that evokes a melody almost or that leads your ear to
expect something. Now, simple example of this
is a chord progression that we can voice in a
way where there is a descending or ascending
line on top of the chord. If I play from C to G, we have a C chord to G chord. A way I could voice lead
that to maybe make it a little more pleasing is to use first inversion for that
C to keep a C on top, and then I'll go to
second inversion G. Now that note on top
has moved down one. Let's say if we're going
to go to A minor using that same chord progression
we used in the other video, if we do C, G, A minor F. We'll start with first inversion
C, The C on top. Second inversion, G, first inversion A minor, and then let's do first
inversion F. Now, you'll notice,
listen to the top of the notes and you'll hear
that line step down. There's this melody
that comes to the top. That's a way of using voice
leading to create something. You can use voice leading to
go in a different direction. Let's say we want
this line to ascend, so maybe it we'll still
start in C first inversion, but we'll go to G root position. A minor root, F first inversion. Now we get what I think is
a little more pleasant. You have that note ascending, it feels a little more hopeful. [MUSIC] Then maybe you do a different voice on
the second half of it. Then you go to the
C second inversion. By using voice-leading, we can take that chord progression, which could sound
very amateurish, but by adding a
little voice-leading, it makes it at least
sound purposeful and sounds like you could
write a song on top of that and it would feel
intentional in a way that's a lot better than moving
the root position around. Now, I think it's time to start breaking out of the key of C, which is very exciting, and I think the best way to do that is to visit our
good old friend, the circle of fifths.
10. Circle of Fifths: [MUSIC] It's time for the circle of fifths
which is awesome. The circle of fifths is great. The reason it's
great is it provides structure and it's
really a map to how to navigate to different
keys and how to know what chords to play and what stuff will
sound good together, and how to break the rules, how to follow the rules. It's like a compass. It's like a musical compass that
just tells you where to go and what you're bearing is
in this landscape of music. We've been talking a
lot about the key of C, so far all of our examples have stayed within the C major scale. I'll put up a little thing
of the circle of fifths. You can see how the first key is C. No
sharps and no flats, it's just all the white keys. Great. If we're
going to go to the "next scale" that
you will learn, you think, well,
wouldn't I learn the D major scale because
isn't that the next note? But that's what's great
about the circle of fifths, is this idea of stepping through keys in fifths instead
of just sequentially. The reason that's helpful is because of the
concept of sharps. If we go one step
higher to the key of G; one notch around the
circle of fifths, we'll see that we add one sharp. G's key signature is one sharp. Now that means that it's all the white notes
except one of the white notes
has been replaced by a black note that is
a half-step above it. Now, we can figure out the
G major scale by following that pattern we talked about way towards the
beginning: whole, whole, half, whole, whole, whole, half. If we start on G and
use that pattern, we could figure out the scale. There's another pattern that occurs when you step through
the circle of fifths. That's that each time
we rotate the circle, we go one step to
the right clockwise, we add a sharp, and that sharp is going to be the seventh of our next key. If I'm in C, no
sharps, no flats. I'm going to go to G one
step around and I'm going to add a sharp of the seventh of our new key which would
be F. I'm going to sharp that F to F-sharp [MUSIC]. Now this is what a G major
sounds like [MUSIC]. Now we can keep that going as
we step through more keys. From G major we'll go up
a fifth to D. We'll sharp the seventh of our
new key and we'll inherit that other sharp
that we had from G, so now we have two sharps. We have F-sharp and
C-sharp [MUSIC]. Let's do it one more time. Let's go up to A
and we're going to keep our two sharps that we have and we're going
to add our seventh, so a G-sharp [MUSIC], and so on and so forth making our way around the circle
of [MUSIC] fifths. One of the ways the circle
of fifths becomes immensely powerful is when
it's combined with another concept called the
Nashville number system. It's a way of
identifying chords, and that's what the next
video is all about.
11. The Number System: [MUSIC] Natural number system, in my opinion, is basically a prerequisite for playing live. It is just the most
useful shorthand to communicate to a musician. This is the type of chord
that we're playing right now. Let's go back to the key of C, and we'll use that
as an example. We have seven unique notes in the key of C. Starting on C, we have C, D, E, F, G, A, B. The natural number
system is saying, let's take all of those notes. Instead of referring to
them by their note name, we will refer to them by the number of the
scale that they are. Their scale degree numbers. Instead of calling this D, [NOISE] we'd call that two. It wouldn't be a D minor chord, it would be a two chord. Same thing with our F would
not be an F major chord. We would call that
the four chord. Let's take an example song like. [MUSIC] If we bring that
over to a different key, we don't need to re-learn
those chords in the other key. We just know that
we played 1, 5, 4. If I go to the key of G, I can play 1, 5, 4. [MUSIC] Natural number system is used extensively
in churches a lot, [MUSIC] or in live music
settings and bars. It's really helpful just to
be able to very quickly, hey, we're in the key of G.
We're going to play this song and immediately
you know what to do because you are learning the chords by their number, by the function that
they have instead of the individual note name. Learning the natural
number system is vital in my opinion and brings such crazy value to whatever team
you're working on. There's no excuse not to learn
it and it's so easy to do. As you listen to music, just try and identify
what the chord number is, and just by doing that over
and over and over again, your ear will naturally
start to adjust and start to figure out the commonalities
of a four chord. Always sounds like a four chord. A six chord has a
certain flavor where it just sounds like a six chord. That might sound
impossible right now if you've never tried listening to music in that way, but as you start and end by singing too if you just
sing through the scale. When you sing through the scale, think of it as
numbers and identify their number instead
[NOISE] of C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C. Think 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 1. Start thinking about
them in that way. I guarantee you
naturally your ear will start to get familiar with the sounds of those chords, thinking in the natural
number system way. In the next video, I
want to go back to chords and start talking
about some extensions, some alternate versions
of chords so we can get a little bit spicy
with some of those chords.
12. Seventh Chords: [MUSIC] Seventh chords.
We have major chords, we have minor chords,
those refer to the triad and adjusting the
center note of the triad. When we say that a chord
is a seventh chord, what exactly are
we talking about? What seven is that referring to? That is referring to the
seventh note of that chord. If I'm in C major, I play a C major seventh chord. That would be adding the
seventh of C. [MUSIC] Now, if I'm still in C major and
I play an F major seven, that is adding the seventh of F, because it's the
seventh of that chord, [MUSIC] which would be
E. In a chord name, any numbers inside
that chord are always referring to the
root note of that chord, not the key that they're
taking place in. There are a couple of
different types of sevens. We have the major seven, which is a major triad
with a seventh on top. [MUSIC] There's
also a minor seven, which is a minor triad
with a flat seven on top. An example of this
naturally occurring in the C major scale is
with A minor seven. We have an A minor
triad [MUSIC] with a seven on top [MUSIC]. The seven of A, normally would be G-sharp. But because it's a
minor seven, it's flat. Both the third of A is
flat because it's minor, [MUSIC] and then the
seven is flat as well because it's minor [MUSIC]. If we start a seven
chord on the key of G, we have what's called
just a straight G7. It's not G major seven, and it's not G minor seven. It's just G7, sometimes called G dominant
seven to specify. What that is, is a G
major triad [MUSIC]. We're going to add the
seventh of G on top. But because F sharp is
not in the C major scale, we have to flat that
F sharp so that it's in the C major
scale and it's an F, which sounds like this [MUSIC]. Another cool thing that
happens in a dominant seven. If we build the dominant
seven step-by-step, we have G, B, D, and F. Well, if I look at the
upper part of that chord, [MUSIC] there's that
diminished chord [MUSIC]. Same thing if I build an
F major seven [MUSIC]. There's an A minor floating
inside that chord [MUSIC]. That's another really
cool way that the base really determines the
flavor of these chords. If I have an A minor [MUSIC], but if I add an F in the bass, [MUSIC] all of a sudden that's not really
an A minor anymore, that's an F major seven [MUSIC]. The base is hugely powerful for determining the flavor
of these chords. I think the seventh chords really demonstrate
that really well. In the next video, we're
going to talk about suspended chords, taking away certain notes,
adding the back in, moving them around
ways to just add some flavor to chords without changing what they're
supposed to do.
13. Suspended Chords: [MUSIC] The best example of
a suspended chord, I think, is if we take C major [MUSIC] and we suspend
the third note, which means that we
just lift it up, and we're not playing
it, and in its place, we're going to play
something different. If I don't play anything there, it's just a fifth [MUSIC]. Whereas if I play a
fourth, in addition, [MUSIC] that's a
C suspended four. We take a C major
and then we move this third finger one note
up to the fourth note, [MUSIC] so a suspended
four or sus4, and then a lot of times
that will resolve down. [MUSIC] You can also
do it the other way, so a suspended two. [MUSIC] Suspended chords are great for just adding a
little bit extra drama. They also sound
beautiful when you just arpeggiate through them
and sweep through them. Similar to how you can
invert major triads, you can invert
suspended chords as well and get some
very pretty results [MUSIC] Sus4 [MUSIC] to major triad. [MUSIC] Just by staying in
C major and just alternating between sus4, sus2, C major and
just sweeping around, you can get these
very interesting, very cool colors that
are very beautiful. What's interesting
about suspended chords, they don't really have major or minor tonality
until we hear that third. That ambiguity is what makes them so
intriguing and so cool. For example, if we
go to the key of a, we don't know if this is A major or minor until
I play the third. [MUSIC] Alternatively, MUSIC] Using that ambiguity can be extremely helpful
in a lot of situations in life if you're transitioning
keys or if you just want to not be so on the nose about something being
major or minor. A suspended chords
are a great way to make something a
little less clear. Now, if I wanted the
third in there in addition to adding the
second or the fourth note, it wouldn't be a sus2 or a sus4, it would just be add
two or add four. If I was going to do a C Major add two, there will be this. [MUSIC] Also very useful. You could also continue to
add up by having an add six [MUSIC] or even an add nine. Then you might
think, wait, there's only seven different notes. What note would nine be? Now basically, it would be if we continue up through our octave, which would be
eight and add nine. The same thing as an add two, but we're specifying
which two that is. It's the two that is
above that octave. [MUSIC] That's an add nine. [MUSIC] Here's an add two. [MUSIC] Similar
sound to add nine, just a little more open, and add two is a little more closed in just different flavors for different circumstances. So far, everything we've been talking about has
been occurring in the major scale
and a lot of that knowledge transfers over to other types of scales as well, such as minor scales, and so that's what
we're going to talk about in the next video. [MUSIC]
14. Relative Minors: [MUSIC] The best introduction to minor scales I can give you
is that for each major scale, there is a relative minor scale. For C major, there is a minor scale that uses the
key signature of C major, no sharps, no flats,
and that's A. If we play an A minor, we're going to use the
same key signature as C. If I play in the key of C, starting on A and ending on A, I'll get the scale of A minor. [MUSIC] A quick way to remember what the
relative minor is, is it's the sixth of whatever
major scale you're in. If you're in D, the minor
key would be B minor. To play in B minor, I would use the key
signature of D, because B is the
sixth of D. [NOISE] This concept of
playing a scale using the key signature of something
that's not the root note, is actually a great
intro into modes. That's all this minor
scale really is; is, it's actually the sixth mode
because it's starting and ending on the sixth
scale degree. We'll go into a little bit
more detail about how to do other modes and why they're so cool and what we
can do with them. That's why the next video
is all about modes.
15. Modes: [MUSIC] What are modes exactly? Well, they are basically scales, but just those same seven notes arranged in different ways to
give us different results. We've actually
already been using modes as part of this course. The major scale is actually
the first mode called Ionian. There are seven different
modes and we've actually seen the
sixth one as well. That's the minor scale, Aeolian. That first mode, Ionian, it's called the first
mode because it starts and ends on the
first scale degree. If we're in C major, we using that as
our key signature. If we start on C
and we end on C, that's the first mode. Now, Dorian is the second mode. If we start on the second
scale degree in the key of C, which is D, and we
go from D to D, that would be a Dorian mode. This is the sound of D Dorian [MUSIC]. It's similar to the minor scale, but the sixth is
actually raised that [MUSIC] it gives it a little
bit of a different flavor. It's a little more
hopeful or something. The third mode is Phrygian. Now would start on the
third scale degree of C and end on the
third scale degree. Starting on E and ending on E, we have Phrygian [MUSIC]. This is used a lot
in film scores to emulate a Middle Eastern sound, but still operating inside
the western music scale. It also can be used
in metal sometimes. The fourth mode is, I think my favorite,
that's the Lydian scale. This starts on the fourth, ends on the fourth,
starts on F ends on F, it sounds like this [MUSIC]. I love that sound. That's
the John Williams Eve, the Star Wars thing. Those big bombastic chords [MUSIC]. Just really lush and
beautiful, love Lydian, the fifth scale is Mixolydian,
starting on fifth, ending on the fifth,
starting on G, ending on G [MUSIC]. Mixolydian is actually a
very common mode to use. I think a great
example of this is in Sweet Home Alabama [MUSIC]. Hearing that G definitely
feels like the stable part of the sound but then you have these other
things going on like this, F, which shouldn't
really go in the key of G major [MUSIC]. It's a great use of
the Mixolydian mode or the Mixolydian scale. The sixth mode is Aeolian, which you've already
had looked at with relative minors using the key signature of C.
If we start and end on A, the sixth scale degree will
have A Aeolian [MUSIC]. Another super common mode. This will show up everywhere
in all pop music. The seventh mode is
the most unusual, and that is Locrian. It's very difficult to
make this mode actually work but if you start and end on the
seventh scale degree, starting and ending on B, you have the B Locrian scale [MUSIC]. It is a very difficult skill to make palatable,
but it can be done. I've heard some Locrian
songs that just sound wild and nothing else because
it's such an unusual scale. But those are the seven modes that we have starting
from Ionian, going back to Dorian,
Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian,
and Locrian.
16. How to Play Scales: [MUSIC] Now, this video is going
to be mainly focused around a piano players, but I think it's important
to cover a couple of basic technique things for
when you're playing scales. Let's take the key
of C, for example. There's a way to go from
one C to the next C, that's very ergonomic
and healthy for your fingers and it
builds strength. You're able to do it quickly. By the way, we refer to our fingers using
numbers as well. Because everything
in music is numbers. Our thumb is going
to be finger 1, finger 2, finger 3
finger 4, finger 5. Then fingers 1, finger 2, finger 3, finger 4 or finger 5. Pinky's are 5, thumbs are 1. The way that we'll play the major scale is
we'll use 1,2,3. [MUSIC] If we know that we want to go further than what
our fifth finger would go, then we're going to swing our first finger or
thumb underneath our third finger
[MUSIC] to hit that 4. [MUSIC] Then we'll finish
the scale-out normal. There are five finger or
pinky ends up hitting that C. [MUSIC] Same thing going back
down only this time, once we get to that
4 note, that F, we're going to swing
our third finger over our thumb to
hit that third note. [MUSIC] Swing the third finger
over the top to hit that E. If we wanted to extend
the scale even further, we would drop our thumb under our fourth finger and then
hit that C again at the top. [MUSIC]. We swing our thumb under
and hit that fourth note. Going to swing our thumb under, hit that C. Now, we're back where we
started and we can keep going on up forever. [MUSIC] The fingering positions for that might vary
slightly from key to key. That's where they feel
different to play through. If I'm playing
through the key of E, for example, that feels different where I'm
moving my finger. [MUSIC] The same thing
applies with your left hand. If you're starting in C, you would start with your pinky. [MUSIC] Swing your third finger over your thumb as we go up. We hit our C with our thumb. Now, we'll swing our fourth
finger over the top. Same thing as the major
scale, it's just mirrored. [MUSIC] Playing that together is very difficult because your fingers are jumping
at different times. As I play in unison, right hand's going to swing here , left hand is going
to swing here. Right hand, left hand. Right hand, left hand. [MUSIC] When you practice scales, do it like this. Play through it very slowly with the right hand extending
through the scale, at least two octaves, so you can get both of those
jumps in there. Do the same thing
with your left hand. Go through the octaves,
get both jumps in there, and then
do them together. You do it slowly with one hand, slowly with one,
slowly together. It's a great way to train
your fingers to start using those muscles and get your brain to talk to
your fingers really well. Do that a couple of times. Gradually pick up your speed. You'll be flying
through it in no time.
17. Make Your Practices Count: [MUSIC] We're
reaching the end of the course here and I
just wanted to give some helpful tips on how
to practice effectively. Because it's possible if
you're practicing piano, to just play around on
the piano and run through your skills and not
really get any better. You'll just make permanent. The things that you
have practiced doesn't make perfect, it
makes permanent. To actually get better and to
make your practices count, here's some things that have
been hugely helpful for me. One, really emphasize
your timing. Practicing with a metronome
is very helpful for this. You don't have to, but just
be aware of your timing. Try and play each note as consistently as possible
with each other. Try not to slow down
or speed up but really focus on your timing. That'll make it a lot
easier to play with other musicians and it
just sounds way better. The next tip is to practice scales in the circle of fifths. As a practice regimen, I think the best thing you
can do is draw your scales, use both hands, go through the whole major scale from C then move on to G, and D, and A and E all the way through
the circle of fifths. Then once you make your
way all the way back to C, that's a pretty decent practice. If you practice that every day for just a couple of weeks, you are going to be absolutely
amazed at how natural those scales start to feel in your fingers and how natural
they start to sound, where you will be
able to just pick out when a note doesn't fit, it will just stick out as,
oh, that's a wrong note. You'll get used to the environment
of what those keys are supposed to sound like and feel like that when you need
to play a song in D, or play a song in A, or play a song an E-flat,
it's all the same to you. It doesn't really
matter because you're just as comfortable. Whatever you're
going to practice, really try and diversify it over a wide range of keys so
that you don't get in a rut of really being able
to play really good in certain keys and not
very good in other keys. Because something that's super
common is playing a song, you're performing with
someone and the vocalist maybe wants to take the song up a half-step or wants to
drop it a half-step. Super common, and that's
something that as musicians, we should be able to do, is to be able to take D and then play a song just
as well in D-flat, play a song in C, play it just as well in B. Being able to adjust how we're playing two
different keys, the secret to doing
that well is drawing scales over and over
again in all 12 keys.
18. In Conclusion: That was a lot that I just
threw at you and it can feel like drinking from a
firehose a little bit if you're not familiar with
these concepts at all. Like I mentioned in the
class trailer one of the best ways to learn
is by immersion, is just by continuing to
think about these things. As you listen to music, try and identify the
number of the chord, try and listen to what is
that chord sound like, does that sound like a four? Where's it going,
Went there that feels like a six that
sounds like a five. Just try and identify what the functions of
the chord is and I guarantee just by
listening to music you will get better at music theory. You'll train your ear to
identify these things. It's hugely, hugely powerful, and if I can encourage
you in any direction of what to do next after
listening to this course, it would be that
trying to identify what the chord functions are. If you'd like free stuff I have a newsletter you
can sign up for and that'll notify you when I drop new courses here on Skillshare, and I'll also do
giveaways there. I'll give away free downloads, free samples, presets
that sort of thing. If that interests
you, the link to sign up is in my Skillshare bio. I'd really appreciate if
you guys sign up for that. Thank you so much for
watching this course, it really does mean a lot to me. If there's any questions you
have about music theory or anything music related in general, please reach out to me. All of my socials and contact info or in
my Skillshare bio and please give me a follow when you're there and
follow all my socials. It really does help me create
more content to put here, and if you have any ideas of what you'd like to
see me teach next, please reach out and
let me know too. I'm always looking for feedback. Thank you so much
for hanging out! I hope you learned a lot. My name Solo Ray and
until next time. See you