Perfect explanation! I was searching for a good explanation and after finding this I realized I am already subscribed since a lot of time to your channel. Me <- dumb.
@MentouradКүн бұрын
19:46 this is what you hear on your first alien encounter
@The0therRollingGirlКүн бұрын
I am so happy with you doing exactly what I was wondering about. I love the internet! Consider me subscribed 🎉😂
@RapidActionAnimationsКүн бұрын
Nice editing!
@bry2kКүн бұрын
Awesome. I can't possibly absorb it all just by watching the video once, but this is worth watching a hundred times.
@mikemasterson5437Күн бұрын
Subbed!! You have my attention 💯🔈❤️👊
@sleepb4570Күн бұрын
Great video
@hardikbajajКүн бұрын
This is invaluable. Thank you so much for sharing all this knowledge for free, starting with the frequencies and the relationships between notes. It has given me an entirely new perspective on music.
@ladc8960Күн бұрын
😮
@WoochiaКүн бұрын
This is part of my video “Master Jazz Chord Progressions in 9 steps”
@mrlofi333Күн бұрын
very cool nice voicings and info trying to learn more and make better music thank you
@babonneau2 күн бұрын
Bravo, super tuto! Et super anglais... sauf: engine, c'est pas "enjaïne", mais "enjine" ;) J'achète un Novation Circuit Tracks pour les beats et le contrôle de synthé en mode séquenceur. Je dois tester le workflow. J'imagine que les beats ne seront pas aussi riches en variations sur le Circuit Tracks que sur le Volca Drums, mais je verrai en fonction de mes besoins de musicien amateur, guitariste à l'origine et commençant mon parcours dans l'univers des synthés (j'ai acquis un Arturia Microfreak récemment). Intéressant de comprendre les possibilités du Volca Drums, même en 2025, grâce à ta vidéo. Merci! Waves de Copenhague!
@ІванКошан-о7е2 күн бұрын
the key switch sounds a little jarring like this, perhaps there is a way to make the transition smoother?
@ringphupanmei74902 күн бұрын
🫡🫡🫡🫡❤️❤️❤️❤️ ...
@saadasif1232 күн бұрын
Thank you for making it more clear! Cheers
@KolyaKovt2 күн бұрын
I didn't get that part about intervals. Why are the fourth and the fifth note on the scale called perfect interval?
@ethan.gilmore3 күн бұрын
I'm not getting any output from my sends? I have the sine wave set to "sends only" and my other tracks are set to receive input from the sine wave track, but nothing comes out. I feel like I'm missing something obvious
@fisrtnamelastname30833 күн бұрын
I just started learning my first instrument and i thought it would be useful to learn the logic behind music. I am 18 minutes in and very confused... Lots of comments are saying this is the best video on this subject though so i think i will keep trying. I will be posting my questions as replies to my comment and modify them to include the answers I find
@fisrtnamelastname30833 күн бұрын
Q1: "So if I take a sound that vibrate at 220Hz, the most consonant sound that can go with it is 440Hz which is the double of that frequency. So they have the simplest ratio of 2:1." "So the most consonant interval between two different notes is when they have a ratio of 3:1." I feel like I'm being told that the most consonant ratio is simultaneously 2:1 and 3:1? Or maybe 2:1 is for a single note while 3:1 is to find a note that is consonant between any two octaves? He didn't mention a second octave that we need to find a consonant note to?
@fisrtnamelastname30833 күн бұрын
Q2: what is a scale A: a scale is a series of notes that form a progression between a note and it's octave Q2.5: Why are scales built from a single note yet use the 3:1 ratio? Why did we end up with the scale of G major instead of A?
@fisch7233 күн бұрын
3:05 shouldn’t the chord be Dm13?
@Woochia3 күн бұрын
@@fisch723 oh damn, you're right. I didn't realise this typo. Of course that's a Dm13
@Woochia3 күн бұрын
This is part of my video “Master Jazz Chord Progressions in 9 steps”
@shinji3913 күн бұрын
Take everything but the tonic and move it up a minor 3rd. Fuck parallel modes. Start with moving chords around, not with music theory.
@Woochia3 күн бұрын
@@shinji391 well if you like moving chords around, that's great 👍 but if you can analyse what you do and like, that gives you even more options to play with 👌
@aleksdizhe4 күн бұрын
Music theory❤❤❤❤
@kimchisushi54894 күн бұрын
But how do you play the melody? Is it within C major scale or within the scale that we’re borrowing?
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Usually that's with the scale you're borrowing. But that borrowing can happen on only one chord too, very momentarily.
@saadasif1232 күн бұрын
You can always follow the chords
@MAWyrwich4 күн бұрын
Right there at the end ... the Vocoder part ... i was grinning from the start, because i had to think about one of my favourite songs from one of my favourite bands ... and i was thinking "oh ... i have to leave a comment, mentioning this song" , because i thought you wouldn´t come up with it ... but you did!!! When you said Tool - Jambi, i was raising my arms, fists pumping the air and whooping (no shit 😄😄)!! ... And furthermore you are delivering a fantastic course here!!! My musical journey has let me to digging more into sound design again after i did it some years ago and this course here helps me quite a lot!!!! Thanks a lot 🙏🙏🙏!!!
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Dude, this is also one of my favourite songs! OF COURSE I'd talk about it if I have a chance 🤣
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Dude, this is also one of my favourite songs! OF COURSE I'd talk about it if I have a chance 🤣
@unsettledcarp1234 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you for sharing this course for free! I watched it all and I'm going to watch it more times. I'm still impressed by the complexity of musical theory. Yesterday I started sketching a piece based on some concepts you introduced here, but I feel like much is left to the ear and that composing is an art of itself that theory can't fully teach you.
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Yes theory will never cover it all. It's handy for composing but music theory is mostly adapted for analysing music (though you can analyse your own music while composing). Which means you don't need to know it all to compose neither. I sometimes come back to this video myself to pick just one concept and compose something around it.
@czasemowieryby25555 күн бұрын
Amount of knowledge in 24 mins is insane
@xuneezana5 күн бұрын
THE GOAT !!!
@anonymous07715 күн бұрын
Heya! Just wanted to ask about the most consonant interval you said in 2:53. I don't get why 1/3 is the most consonant interval between two notes, so tell me if I got it wrong: Basically, sounds are more consonant when the ratio is simple(an integer?), like 1:2 or 1:3 or 1:4 and so on, so forth. If they have a simple ratio, that means they are more or less the same note, just with a higher pitch. We're talking about how 1:3 is the most consonant between two different notes, so let's say a note is like 220Hz(A note, 1:1 ratio), the next is 440(A note also, 1:2 ratio). What confuses me is why is 660Hz somehow special when it's also a simple ratio between two numbers (the initial 220Hz and 660, 1:3 ratio)? Isn't 660Hz also an A note? Here's my guess: Is it because it's an odd number? I kept thinking about it but I just couldn't get the answer, please send help. 😢
@Woochia5 күн бұрын
@@anonymous0771 all notes with a simple ratio are not the same note. It stays the same note if you multiply or divide the frequency by 2. So the notes that are the same are at the ratios 1:1, 1:2, 1:4, 1:8, etc... (x2, x2x2, x2x2x2, etc.) So the ratio of 1:3 is the lowest that is not the note of the fundamental.
@anonymous07714 күн бұрын
@Woochia Oh, I see now! Thank you very much dood, I'll do my best to study the rest of the course! Thank you for making this tutorial too : D
@andyxbox16 күн бұрын
Big Thanks to you! God bless you and your family!
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
@puvendranpillay88026 күн бұрын
You explained better than open studio
@Woochia5 күн бұрын
@@puvendranpillay8802 🤣 thanks!
@Chichilcitlalli6 күн бұрын
This is awesome! Where can I buy your fractal music, like the one at 6:45?
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Thanks! Unfortunately it is not for sale. It's just an audio example I made for this video :x
@ChichilcitlalliКүн бұрын
@@Woochia FUCK!
@Kunita16 күн бұрын
This video is the single best source of music theory information on KZbin!
@Woochia4 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@oDucking6 күн бұрын
dang i love open studio!! gonna watch this series of yours for sure!!
@ladc89606 күн бұрын
😮
@Woochia6 күн бұрын
This is part of my video “Master Jazz Chord Progressions in 9 steps”
@caspay217 күн бұрын
This is very cool - some unsolicited advice, but I think using an Ozzy/Shoegaze style doubler or slapback on the vocals would really make the mix work well just since there’s a lot of reverb on everything. Great work
@cardamom5937 күн бұрын
Cool
@sal-the-man7 күн бұрын
I audibly said “Ohhhhh” when I saw the modes. Now I know what all those scales are
@Marshall-Argentmetal7 күн бұрын
There's just something inherently country from an acoustic guitar being distorted
@justicegebo73537 күн бұрын
If you win it shows you credits Easiest way to win is to stay in place and button mash shoot
@Jemphy7 күн бұрын
This is really éducative.. Thanks a lot.
@thefleetneat52807 күн бұрын
Even if you don't play an instrument this is just fun to learn anyway
@mumblety8 күн бұрын
Awesome vid!
@ladc89608 күн бұрын
😮
@ordinaryextraordinary94848 күн бұрын
Finally, I can enter a gladiator battle with the beast that is music theory (I keep getting mauled by hungarian harmonics)
@Woochia8 күн бұрын
This is part of my video “Master Jazz Chord Progressions in 9 steps”
@scratchymarcus25179 күн бұрын
My brain is hurting even though i learnt music theory…