thank you friend for sharing your knowledge greetings from Tenerife dr black sheep
@Pianohousetutorials8 ай бұрын
You are welcome ❤️🎹❤️
@AutPen38Ай бұрын
Nice video. My analysis is slightly different. I don't think there's actually a Bb in the first chord, but the Roland U-20/U-220 piano (if that's what the band used) creates a particularly loud 3rd harmonic at that frequency when you hit the lowest Eb. The piano rompler used on the record - plus mid/high EQ boosts and tape saturation etc - made overtones in the upper octaves ring out that probably weren't actually played. (I think the record also has a string part that doubles the piano in a higher octave). I think it's easier (and possibly more accurate) to play the main chords as: 1. Absus4/Eb fingered as Eb Eb Ab Db. 2. Fm7 played as F F Ab C Eb. 3. Gb played in root position Gb Gb Bb Db. 4. Fm7 again. Pianos are weird though, due to their individual harmonics and resonances. With some of my VST plug-ins, your chord fingerings sound closer to the record than mine, but with others the simplified version I've posted works very well.
@PianohousetutorialsАй бұрын
You are correct. I spoke with Steve (Gorton) a few months back and he confirmed that I was using the incorrect inversions. It's close enough for most people though to create a similar sounding riff.
@AutPen38Ай бұрын
@@Pianohousetutorials Ah, cool. Nice one. I would have been convinced by your version if I hadn't been studying it myself. In various recreations I've seen on here, no one was quite sure of the chords or inversions. There were also debates about whether it was a Roland piano or the Korg M1. To my crappy old ears it sounds like a mixture of both!