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Learning guitar (achievement unlocked!)
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<blockquote data-quote="Davy" data-source="post: 77240560" data-attributes="member: 404357"><p>I know it may seem more advanced, but really it's not. It's just a different approach, a different way of thinking about music. And different voicings of a single chord (like in the MITA example) can sound like many different chords changing, but it's actually just the same chord with the same notes re-arranged. Nothing difficult about that. The Classical masters did that all the time too in their compositions.</p><p></p><p>The most important idea about that video is how all that music came out of that single C Major triad formula, a 4+3 interval chord on the C root. By thinking of harmony that way, it allowed the creation of those other chords Jones used, which were also 4+3 chords. What that meant is that the 'emotion' stayed the same, even with those two other chord types, but still gave enough musical variation to keep the piece from sounding boring.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Davy, post: 77240560, member: 404357"] I know it may seem more advanced, but really it's not. It's just a different approach, a different way of thinking about music. And different voicings of a single chord (like in the MITA example) can sound like many different chords changing, but it's actually just the same chord with the same notes re-arranged. Nothing difficult about that. The Classical masters did that all the time too in their compositions. The most important idea about that video is how all that music came out of that single C Major triad formula, a 4+3 interval chord on the C root. By thinking of harmony that way, it allowed the creation of those other chords Jones used, which were also 4+3 chords. What that meant is that the 'emotion' stayed the same, even with those two other chord types, but still gave enough musical variation to keep the piece from sounding boring. [/QUOTE]
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