The History of the "Anime Canon" Chord Progression

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Cadence Hira

Cadence Hira

Күн бұрын

Let's talk about the "Anime Canon" chord progression and how it has evolved over the centuries. MUSIC THEORY.
American vs Japanese chords: • Differences between Am...
Special thanks to:
-Everyone who helped me with my research in the past few months, including but not limited to: my roommates, Jen, my parents, KiAme and my grandmother.
-soramylove for the Kingdom Hearts AMV lol
Tunes used:
docs.google.co...
Tunes which got claimed:
Blend S: • Blend-S - Opening | Bo...
Pokemon Journeys: • Pocket Monsters OP26 /...
Bandcamp: cadencehira.ba...
Soundcloud: / cadence-hira

Пікірлер: 193
@davidbutterfield4451
@davidbutterfield4451 2 жыл бұрын
shoutout to grandmother
@Pkmn20
@Pkmn20 2 жыл бұрын
this whole vid was just a buildup to that megamind reveal
@xaviercampospalma
@xaviercampospalma 2 жыл бұрын
I think it is because of City Pop, like Tomo Fujita said, back then jazz musicians needs to pay their bills, so they play pop at bars and stuff, but they made pop with their Jazzy knowlege, so time passes, and here we are, jpop with weird chord structures. Very nice video btw, very interesting analysis
@UBvtuber
@UBvtuber 7 ай бұрын
Aka their pop is a lot more interesting musically, even the most basic moeblob anime opening type stuff.
@soramizu1
@soramizu1 Жыл бұрын
I am a Japanese who studies chord progressions. This chord progression is called "Anime Song Progression(アニソン進行)", "Hare Hare Progression(ハレ晴レ進行)", or "Konfame Progression(コンファメ進行)" in Japan. I think the original is "There Will Never Be Another You". I am glad that this chord progression is being talked about abroad. Translated by DeepL.
@Φωτό-ρ7π
@Φωτό-ρ7π Жыл бұрын
Odo shinko one note ahead of Rick roll?
@soramizu1
@soramizu1 Жыл бұрын
@@Φωτό-ρ7π I don't know the origin of the Royal Progression, but I believe that it came into mass use in J-pop with the song "Graduation Photo(卒業写真)" by Yumi Arai(荒井由実), released in 1975. This song was used as the theme song for a movie, and many schools still sing it at graduation ceremonies. It is also used in classical music such as "Sinfonie Nr. 1 B-Dur op. 38 "Frühling"".
@kimojhin
@kimojhin 11 ай бұрын
これ韓国にもよく使われてる進行だし、個人的に一番好きな進行なので是非名前知りたかったです!本当に助かります
@soramizu1
@soramizu1 11 ай бұрын
@@kimojhin 役に立てたようでよかったです!
@nyusie-l
@nyusie-l 9 ай бұрын
Ow ! « There will never be another you » was one of my first favorite song to play when I started Jazz, I’m also half- japanese with « japanese » sensibilities in my piano classical playing, improvisation and composition, so now I can understand why this song resonated in my mind that strong, thanks to you 🙏
@cakemanLHK
@cakemanLHK 4 ай бұрын
I can't accurately explain the bamboozlement I felt by clicking on a video about anime music theory and immediately being met with a google streetview of my hometown
@olivia1769
@olivia1769 Жыл бұрын
shoutout to grandma's ringtone
@kidsea13
@kidsea13 Жыл бұрын
Shoutout to Beethoven-appreciating grandmothers
@kokodi01
@kokodi01 2 ай бұрын
I did not expect Old Great Britian, Genshin Impact and Megamind to appear in one single video
@BigPapaMitchell
@BigPapaMitchell 2 жыл бұрын
I've been thinking about this concept for years, how some of the tools used in japanese pop have a very distinct sound with the progressions they choose, and you can tell when some music is inspired by j-pop by whether they use these devices. Thanks for putting some theory to this, I'm not crazy after all.
@brhim5731
@brhim5731 2 жыл бұрын
GRANDMA SHOUT OUT LETSGOOOO
@willnathman388
@willnathman388 11 ай бұрын
That 2 5 to IV is ubiquitous in Japanese music - at least what I've listened to. And it hits every single time
@zeroflowne
@zeroflowne 2 жыл бұрын
4:15 or so : I can't believe you've done this
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
great catch lmao
@jasperiscool
@jasperiscool Жыл бұрын
Glad I wasn’t the only one triggered.
@WhitePaintbrush
@WhitePaintbrush 8 ай бұрын
God dammit
@pianoarennzimimikopi
@pianoarennzimimikopi 6 ай бұрын
日本の音楽について少し理解するために日本で流行った歴史と理解するためになるヒントをここに書いておきます。 今の日本では過去にロックやジャズにラテンが流行っていた事でこれらの要素が多く含まれています。 1865年頃に薩摩藩軍楽隊ができた頃から西洋和声へと移行していきました。この頃から日本和声は廃れていきました。 日本国歌の君が代は日本和声のメロディと西洋和声の伴奏で作られており、演歌もこの方法で作られています。 日本和声は雅楽で使われており今の日本ではほとんど使われていません。昭和歌謡曲ではもう少しシンプルなコード進行をしていたため昭和から平成にかけて複雑なコード進行を好むようになったと思われます。
@rkirsling
@rkirsling 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like it would be useful to give that `ii-V/vi vi bvi ii-V/IV IV` part itself a name, since this is effectively a concatenation of that with Royal Road (and its usual ii-V exit). Louie Zong even makes use of this in the "jazzy version" of his A Thing About Chords. 🙂
@musicfriendly12
@musicfriendly12 2 жыл бұрын
I didn't get the way you wrote that at first cause I'm not used to reading chords like that, don't know if it's just me, I was looking and my thought process was like Ok, ii and then V of VI, so a IV V I to the VI... And then, bVI? That's kinda weird, but ok, wonder what that sounds like... To the ii again? Tritone in the bass, interesting, and then V/IV to the IV and then to the I, that's kinda weird asf, but sounds interesting. I don't know if I was the only one lol
@dar2vas
@dar2vas 2 жыл бұрын
@@musicfriendly12 "ii-V/vi" is just: vii-III-vi "vi bvi ii-V/IV" is a chromatic walk down in the bass (as ii/IV is just v) which is followed by a ii-V starting from that same v (v-I-IV). "vii III vi vi bvi v I IV"
@theheathbar123
@theheathbar123 26 күн бұрын
Thanks so much, I also didn't understand OP's way of writing that, now I see by "/" they mean "of". "ii-V/IV" means "ii-V of IV"
@bangryak
@bangryak 2 жыл бұрын
For Korean RnB, there are many songs that follow the same chord progression as Zion.T's "May." To name a few, "입장정리" by Primary, "Story of someone I know" by San E, "Some" by Soyou+Junggigo. I originally thought that Korean RnB drew from American RnB, and that these songs specifically drew from "Officially Missing You" by Tamia (just my speculation); in fact there was a straight up cover of this song by a Korean group called Geeks that was quite popular. I think these kind of chord progressions are common in American RnB in the 90s/2000s(?) and still exist today to some extent, but they are extremely popular in Korean RnB recently (and K-pop more generally), and of course in Japanese media as you point out. This was a really enjoyable video. Seeing you shout out specific songs I listened to when I was younger (the examples by MCR, Khalil Fong, Super Junior, Zion.T) was kind of nostalgic because at the time I really gravitated to these more "colorful" chord progressions without understanding why. Now that I have more music theory knowledge I can better explain my younger self's tastes.
@faizyusuf2470
@faizyusuf2470 Жыл бұрын
Hello there, I know its been almost a year but can you please recommend me any korean song that are RnB or hvae the royal road progression? thank you
@johnnyblunders
@johnnyblunders 5 ай бұрын
I came here to mention RnB and Gospel! I don't have any specific examples but as I find them I may come back and edit this comment. I had friends that would listen to gospel music or RnB a lot and this was one of my immediate thoughts. And just while I'm here, Jungle P from One Piece uses the progression in the first half of the verse- a banger
@paletreker
@paletreker 2 жыл бұрын
I might be wrong but isn't this chord progressions also in 'Mr. Blue sky'? Btw great video! Great in-depth explanation.
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
Almost, it starts with the correct first 4 chords and then does something different afterwards
@ashtarbalynestjar8000
@ashtarbalynestjar8000 2 жыл бұрын
I’d like to submit something completely different, one of the most recognizable Latin American romantic ballads of the 1980’s: No te apartes de mí by Roberto Carlos. The progression runs a little slower over the course of the entire verse, but it’s almost identical to the Anime Canon, just without a few passing chords.
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
fire!
@Nnwt
@Nnwt 2 жыл бұрын
Holy shit, I love this video! I've always thought about this progression as having a strong link to jazz and the simplified I vi IV V progression found in pop but never thought of the older sources. It's mind-blowing how you can trace musical ideas really far back. It gets more fun: Wikipedia says that "Confirmation" is actually a contrafact of a tune called "Twilight Time" which was first recorded by Les Brown in 1944 and released in Jan of 1945, the same year that Parker supposedly wrote his tune. If you take a listen to "Twilight Time" you'll hear that the A section is almost identical to "Confirmation"'s A section bar the missing related ii of the V/vi and it instead has a backdoor cadence of VI I V/ii after the IV chord. Who knows if Parker was inspired by this earlier record, but it's somewhat likely considering that the practice of writing contrafacts was so rampant during his time (the B section of "Confirmation" is not like "Twilight Time" though). It gets even more fun: there is another tune that originated a couple years earlier in 1942, "There Will Never Be Another You," that has the same progression of "Confirmation" up to the IV chord where it does a backdoor to the I and then does vi V/V ii V (which is actually what "Twilight Time" does!). All along I've been associating the Anime Canon progression with "There Will Never Be Another You" since that's one of my favorite tunes, and now thanks to you I see more links in the chain. You might find another step of the evolution of this progression if you do more digging. This stuff really goes deep!
@HikariKrome
@HikariKrome Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of "어땠을까" by PSY and Lena Park: Eb - [Dm7(b5) G7] - Cm7 - [Bbm7 Eb7] - Ab - Eb/G - Fm7 - [Bbsus4 Bb7] (I - [viiø7 V7/vi] - vi7 - [v7 V7/IV] - IV - I6 - ii7 - [Vsus4 V7]) Also - you should have included some examples from "Love Live! School Idol Project".
@truffeltroll6668
@truffeltroll6668 Ай бұрын
This is a massive conspiracy. I listened to 11 y 6 recently and was wondering about the changes. Why did they sound so much like an anime intro? I compared it to the digimon intro and bam, same changes. That intro sounds closer to MCR than 11y6, so I compared the changes. It's fucked up that this video has only 30.000 views, but the royal road one has 3mil. This video is a perfect explanation of music theory and development. You explain the substitute chords incredibly well.
@The_Musical_Cartograph
@The_Musical_Cartograph 2 жыл бұрын
Could we sum up the progression as being I} - {II - V - I} in relative minor - {II - V - I} in Main key - {Royal Road} in Main key - {II - V - But you connect the parts with secondary dom ? And you can go crazy with the substitutions as long as you keep the core VoiceLeading of all the parts intact ?
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty much! Just make sure the II-V-I in main key is actually II_V/IV and the progression still maintains the I VI IV V framework
@The_Musical_Cartograph
@The_Musical_Cartograph 2 жыл бұрын
@@CadenceHira Yeah i noticed that that part appears mostly as a {Pre-dom of Main - II/IV - V/IV} but the Pre-dom is omitted more often than not! especially in the more cinematic stuff Thank you for all that work ^^
@doraexplarora
@doraexplarora 4 ай бұрын
4:18 hey wait a minute i heard something...
@iian724
@iian724 2 жыл бұрын
SHOUT OUT TO GRAMMA
@FirstLast-uj9ud
@FirstLast-uj9ud 2 жыл бұрын
The "Pachelbel progression" is actually called the descending 5-6 sequence, and it is a well-established sequence in music theory. The progression in its entirety long predates Pachelbel himself; it can be found in music treatises as early as the 15th century. Pachelbel may have popularised the sequence to the 20th century layman, but anyone with a decent education in traditional music theory would have known the descending 5-6 sequence and its derivatives, regardless of whether or not they knew Pachelbel's Canon itself.
@MaggaraMarine
@MaggaraMarine 2 жыл бұрын
Yes. Händel used it in The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba, and Mozart used it in The Queen of the Night aria. And of course there are plenty of other examples, but those are some of the most well known ones. (And of course there's also the Soviet anthem...) It being a sequence is what makes it so popular and "natural" sounding. It's kind of like the circle of fifths progression - it's probably something people could come up with without even being familiar with other tunes that use the progression.
@breviculum5904
@breviculum5904 3 ай бұрын
Even as a 21st century layman there's also pomp & circumstance, which i *think* is the same. Idunno tho im just a layman.
@Doomacam
@Doomacam Жыл бұрын
Awesome Video!! I got so hyped when you mentioned Official Hige Dandism! They are my favourite band for the reasons you mentioned. "Crybaby" wowed me even before I knew it modulated 12 times! It was a quick descent into absolutely living and breathing Higedan. They have been so innovative for the J-pop scene since they got popular with "Pretender". And now, Since the release of this video, their song "Subtitle" which is another subversive "Royal road extension" song has just past Gen Hoshino's "Koi" for longest at no.1 on billboard.
@snobjorn1232
@snobjorn1232 4 ай бұрын
Confirmation transposed to G just becomes "för kärlekens skull" by Ted Gärdestad
@fjbz3737
@fjbz3737 Жыл бұрын
I think that the reason this type of chord progression sees more popularity in Japan is cultural. Japan’s cultural attitude is geared toward a relentless striving for systematic efficiency, even more so than in the United States, and I think it shows in their art. A society like theirs where individualistic emotional expression is outwardly inhibited only intensifies an inner longing for it under the surface, especially for those select few already predisposed to artistic tendencies. Anime and Japanese music are so much more emotionally vivid because they are an outlet for those feelings as the only exception to an otherwise stifling way of life. In the United States we take this kind of expression for granted and so it just doesn’t seem urgent for us to search within ourselves for the most emotionally resonant chord progressions, at least not as much as in Japan. I personally think we should adopt their artistic approach too though over our current musical complacency.
@rosey_is_a_girl
@rosey_is_a_girl 2 күн бұрын
I agree with this so much. I wonder how it all relates to the weird Japan effect where the happier music sounds the darker its lyrical content can be sometimes? The juxtaposition and combination of starchily contrasting ideas makes certain songs so haunting, and they hit so much harder.
@courtneythompson6179
@courtneythompson6179 Күн бұрын
@@rosey_is_a_girlkinda like Goodluck darling
@gavinleepermusic
@gavinleepermusic 3 ай бұрын
I really like your video essays, Cadence-san! They’re like overflowing with passion for the subject matter, and the numbers you’re hitting also speak for themselves in demonstrating that folks are enjoying the topics you’re picking and the way you’re covering them. One thing that this video could have used, and that I hope your future video essays have, is a bit more conciseness and the kind of “tell us where we’re going, take us there, tell us where we’ve been” structure that’s generally taught regarding the essay format. Like this topic, while super interesting, could have probably been well covered with about 10 minutes or so. Also, I think Roman numerals below the staff would help clarify the points you’re making. I know I’m commenting on this a couple years after publishing, so maybe you’ve already seen to this. Anyway, take that with a pinch of salt because, like I said, what you’re doing is clearly working from an algo standpoint, but if you want to present these findings in a more formal academic context later on, I think tightly edited videos will make for more helpful academic resources. This is awesome stuff though! Can’t wait to watch the next one!
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 3 ай бұрын
Hi Gavin! Yeah I definitely know what you mean. I think being concise vs. comprehensive while also considering level of visual clarity is something I'm still trying to find a good balance of. i.e. roman numerals that are always visible were in the original version of some of the tunes but were too cluttery with the lyrics/chords. At least the editing is something I've hopefully improved since this haha I will take your advice to heart, your videos were a huge inspiration for me starting out! Thanks so much for watching my stuff and for your kind words.
@catsandwich1406
@catsandwich1406 5 ай бұрын
i have heard this in japanese songs, never thought of it as japanese though, idk i also don't watch anime
@spekkio
@spekkio 2 жыл бұрын
29:25 the fusion of my two absolute favourite things
@eglaiosdeminecraft9259
@eglaiosdeminecraft9259 Жыл бұрын
Never thought there'd ever be a video about "the most iconic anime progression" that would actually showcase the right prog lol Seems I was wrong
@mikexbustillos
@mikexbustillos 8 ай бұрын
Is she not on Patreon? How do I throw money at this creator??
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 8 ай бұрын
Patreon SOON™ THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT :D
@yilan_gulsum856
@yilan_gulsum856 Жыл бұрын
openly enjoying canon in d is such a power move
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira Жыл бұрын
if anyone doesn't like canon in d they are no longer allowed to listen to music, nay, listen to any sound at all. buh bye!
@yilan_gulsum856
@yilan_gulsum856 Жыл бұрын
@@CadenceHira senpai noticed me! UwU
@MusicalPlayground717
@MusicalPlayground717 2 жыл бұрын
4:18 . . . nice.
@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 7 ай бұрын
per the beginning, I wouldn't really say the latter sounds particular japanese, not in comparison to the first anyways. It just sounds like jazz basically Probably a more accurate statement isn't that our harmonic language differs but rather simply that what Pop is to Japan and what Pop is to the US differs quite a lot, but that doesn't mean what is found in jpop doesn't occur in some form in US music, just perhaps not pop
@rachaelsu9750
@rachaelsu9750 11 ай бұрын
mr blue sky by elo? idk maybe it just sounds like the anime canon to me.... I don't understand music theory at all so a lot of this video went way over my head, but it was still so fun to watch!!
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 11 ай бұрын
it's close to the anime canon! it diverges from the form after the fourth chord
@chills_tiny_mom
@chills_tiny_mom 5 ай бұрын
YES I NOTICED THAT TOO ISTG I HEARD LIKE THE ROYAL ROAD IN IT SOMEWHERE
@rosey_is_a_girl
@rosey_is_a_girl 2 күн бұрын
ReI by THE ORAL CIGARETTES used it. (I know it cuz osu! and it’s really fun on drumset)
@Matecrash
@Matecrash 11 ай бұрын
I loved the random Google Maps.
@jaydenelnas3775
@jaydenelnas3775 Жыл бұрын
I think the jazz standard I'll Close My Eyes follow the anime canon to some degree.
@dckog8282
@dckog8282 2 жыл бұрын
YEEEAAAAAA GRANDMAAAAAA!!!!
@mercurydrive9720
@mercurydrive9720 Жыл бұрын
canon rock was also the reason I learned guitar 15 years ago!
@LeafGreen906
@LeafGreen906 2 жыл бұрын
>occasionally turned dorian during christmas time alol
@evaenjoyer858
@evaenjoyer858 Жыл бұрын
Hey! Stumbled on your vids some days ago and loved your content! I just now saw, in the description, that you give composition lessons. Where can I find your email for more info?
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira Жыл бұрын
check the about section on my channel!
@thelazymusician5958
@thelazymusician5958 2 жыл бұрын
RIP Berklee bois. Great vid!
@tangsolaris9533
@tangsolaris9533 Жыл бұрын
I always thought of Pachelbel's canon in D as the romanesca with funny little plagal to half cadence
@tangsolaris9533
@tangsolaris9533 Жыл бұрын
It's really amazing how Pachelbel's progression has survived the test of time! One of my favorite songs is Rhythm Doctor - One Shift More. I picked up guitar around the time I found the game, and it helped me appreciate the simplicity yet inevitability of the chord pattern.
@g_way
@g_way 11 ай бұрын
5:02 LET'S GO GRANDMA
@kashmoney4974
@kashmoney4974 2 жыл бұрын
Great video! Shout out to grandma! Here for the maps guessing and the drawing of smol cadence!
@Toastedtapas
@Toastedtapas 2 жыл бұрын
You should listen to the Mao Mao: Heroes of Pure heart theme song. It uses this chord progression exactly. It's also a good show
@Toby_Blyth
@Toby_Blyth 5 ай бұрын
Dont change your ringtone Grandma‼️
@theheathbar123
@theheathbar123 22 күн бұрын
How about "Piano Man" by Billy Joel and the chorus of "Changes" by David Bowie? Also someone mentioned "Pomp and Circumstance", which I had always internalized as having this progression, but I recently realized the bass starts differently, moving up from G to A to B, then staying on B for two chords. It kind of gives the whole thing a rising feel... Then there's an interesting variant where in the first 4 bars the bass stays on the same note but another voice (the tenor I guess?) starts a fifth above and moves up chromatically, creating effectively the same harmonic motion. The examples I know are the Super Mario Land (not World) theme and "Losing My Mind" from Follies by Stephen Sondheim
@aaronmalver7452
@aaronmalver7452 Жыл бұрын
Genuinely outstanding video. Wow.
@johnnytorres9461
@johnnytorres9461 2 жыл бұрын
LITERALLY LAST NIGHT I BINGED LIKE 5 VIDS THEN A NEW ONE TODAY LESS GOOOOOO
@lucasabbade2009
@lucasabbade2009 8 ай бұрын
Dragon ball gt opening
@WhitePaintbrush
@WhitePaintbrush 8 ай бұрын
Just coming back to say thank you for introducing me to Higedan. They’re like my favourite band now
@dliessmgg
@dliessmgg 2 жыл бұрын
thanks grandma
@dliessmgg
@dliessmgg 2 жыл бұрын
Question: What exactly do you mean with for example F+7 at 14:00? I'm guessing it's F7#5 but I'm not sure
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
@@dliessmgg yes that's correct (i also forgot to play the #5 in the example lol)
@dliessmgg
@dliessmgg 2 жыл бұрын
@@CadenceHira oh yea my ear was also a bit confused but i chalked that up to me being a theory nerd with not much practical experience lol
@johndoe9194
@johndoe9194 2 жыл бұрын
Yoooo shoutout to Canon Rock! Def inspired me to pick up guitar! (Also great work on the blackadder video)
@MaggaraMarine
@MaggaraMarine 2 жыл бұрын
When it comes to the point raised at 27:50, I think it's important to consider other musical elements than just the chords. What if you made an instrumental track that used the Axis progression instead, but kept all of the other elements similar (rhythms, instrumentation, overall arrangement) - would it still sound Japanese? (I assume it would.) And what if you took an Anime tune and arranged it in a different way, and only kept the original melody and chords - would it still sound recognizably Japanese? My point is, there are other things that make a song sound like "Anime music", and I think Anime music is a recognizable style of music even without progressions like Canon, circle of 5ths or Royal Road (even though those progressions do contribute to the "Anime sound").
@Mtaalas
@Mtaalas 3 ай бұрын
You know, the impact of the second world war shouldn't be underestimated. During the war and even before it, any american music and culture was basically completely banned or at least strongly frowned upon, even before the war because it was "enemy culture" and "not Japanese", so Jazz musicians and aficionados hid the vinyls from military police in their attics and basements etc. and had secret jam sessions and if caught, could face quite serious repercussions... let alone play to the audiences to support your family. When war ended, suddenly it wasn't illegal anymore to play, own and express jazz or western culture... even though many frowned upon it because of the occupation and the shame of Japan losing the war etc. but it got better and for that reason the music and the style worked its way EVERYWHERE with the musicians who were free from the oppression AND because of the occupation and all the Americans around the Japan importing, playing and wanting to hear jazz. Thus those Jazzy chord progressions got completely stuck into Japanese music culture. It's a weird thing... Yes, everything you said is also very very true. But I just want to point out that perhaps, without WWII, this chord progression might not have ever got so completely stuck into Japanese psyche... WW2 is also very responsible for the Seifuku, the traditional Japanese school uniform for women... weird huh?
@calebmcjones
@calebmcjones 2 ай бұрын
Is the fact that Giant Blue Head takes ideas from Mr. Blue Sky at all related to why it's using the Anime Canon? The first four chords of the verse line up with the anime canon, the main difference is that I don't think Mr. Blue Sky uses the 4 5 3 6 progression.
@lucidlucario710
@lucidlucario710 Ай бұрын
I was today years old when i learned that Walk off the Earth, one of my favorite bands and the people who played "Somebody that I used to know" on a single guitar with 5 people made the English Pokemon Journeys opening. Huh!
@LinkCafe82
@LinkCafe82 2 жыл бұрын
アニソンのコード進行はジャズ由来だったんですね〜
@Rustedhubcap
@Rustedhubcap Жыл бұрын
Gotta say your videos are such a blast to watch, hope you get some time to craft and upload soon- i look forward to seeing what you will put out
@mimisaiko
@mimisaiko 5 ай бұрын
So cool, JerryC is from Taiwan, everyone got Canon Rock in their MP3 player back in the days. And now you got a subscriber from Taiwan here TBH, every modern music is influenced by western music, especially the countries that have strong relationship with America post war like Japan and Taiwan. US troops stayed there for years ,along with their music. There are still people that are more focused on folk-music though.
@Donderu
@Donderu 4 ай бұрын
I always thought Black parade was perfect for an anime OP, but I could never understand why until now, I have been vindicated!
@andyghkfilm2287
@andyghkfilm2287 6 ай бұрын
2:16 ah yes, just enjoying this documentary-type video about Japanese chord progressions- 2:26 g-greensleeves? Lol
@starplatinum727
@starplatinum727 Ай бұрын
Sign by flow which is the 6th Naruto shippuden opening, but it's closer to the actual canon than anime canon
@thekrunkadidliacdude5033
@thekrunkadidliacdude5033 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video! Super interesting as always!
@Gruskinator
@Gruskinator Жыл бұрын
as far as idol anime, i can tell you that it feels like at least half the songs from love live use this at some point, whether it be the main theme or the opening riff, and i could probably name at least a dozen off the top of my head. i was never really curious in finding an official name, i just knew that it appeared in a lot of anime music, so i always just described it as confirmation or bird blues with some fudging near the end to round it out and keep in the vicinity of japanese pop. once i got into love live with its vast catalog of music it started to feel like they really didn't try in a lof of songs, opting to just slap a generic melody on top of that progression with equally generic instrumentation. i still like it though, as someone who plays jazz piano
@Luke-tt3dt
@Luke-tt3dt 11 ай бұрын
The Country Streaks at 0:04 is Denmark for sure.
@archdukegrand9706
@archdukegrand9706 4 ай бұрын
I'm surprised I haven't seen anyone mention Ken Ashcorp's "Komm Susser Tod but I ruined it as per usual"
@bluepearl_22
@bluepearl_22 4 ай бұрын
Definitely check out Butterfly by Wada Kouji aka the Digimon Adventure OP.
@ShirubaGin
@ShirubaGin 2 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure "Do you want to build a snowman" from Frozen does this.
@CadenceHira
@CadenceHira 2 жыл бұрын
it's pretty close, but deviates a bit too much from the canon progression (it's I V IV II_V/IV IV I/3 II_V/VI VI II7 II-7 IV-/3)
@gavinpeters9531
@gavinpeters9531 Жыл бұрын
This gives me an idea... Anime music icecream trucks
@JM-nx8yq
@JM-nx8yq 8 ай бұрын
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO now everytime I hear a song there is a chance I get Pachelbel's Canoned
@alekd4415
@alekd4415 Жыл бұрын
please keep making content hira!
@N.D.A.N.
@N.D.A.N. 4 ай бұрын
0:50 I've listened to too many Japanese music that I predicted all the chords
@That1CelloGuy
@That1CelloGuy Ай бұрын
4:20 the lick Of course it's at one of the funny numbers 🙄
@linuxjodi4311
@linuxjodi4311 Жыл бұрын
Shout out to nanna..❤ Your grandkid rocks~ 🔥
@loganl3746
@loganl3746 5 ай бұрын
16:24 Okay, but can this be the new Goth/Emo wedding tune?
@speedyperalta2833
@speedyperalta2833 2 жыл бұрын
Shout out to Gammy keepin it 100 . . . . . . . Also SWED
@HummingbirdMusicLO
@HummingbirdMusicLO 2 жыл бұрын
That was excellent. Thank you so much for this!
@pikaporeon
@pikaporeon 6 ай бұрын
Funny enough I got into Canon from Neon Genesis Evangelion
@dufflepug5041
@dufflepug5041 2 жыл бұрын
Haven't finished, but I can tell it's gonna be a banger
@TheRandomSandwich
@TheRandomSandwich 2 жыл бұрын
UNKL says hi :)
@dufflepug5041
@dufflepug5041 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheRandomSandwich trme
@zagle1772
@zagle1772 18 күн бұрын
shoutout to cadence's grandmother
@mymo_in_Bb
@mymo_in_Bb Ай бұрын
Did you think we wouldn't notice the licc at 4:17?
@JoelSyverud
@JoelSyverud Ай бұрын
Noooooo pachebel!!!! Stop following meeee😂😂😂
@crazygoji
@crazygoji 2 жыл бұрын
idol song by Seiko oomori has a similar chord progression, it's different though. b careful of the copyright goblins
@flyingbacon1997
@flyingbacon1997 2 жыл бұрын
Great geo guesser gameplay, thanks Grandma!
@RobyMBeki
@RobyMBeki 2 жыл бұрын
I love these videos! Such great explanations 😁🥰
@Bramhallthefifth
@Bramhallthefifth Ай бұрын
i didnt know just what i needed by the cars had its roots in the renaissance period
@DangHoang3
@DangHoang3 5 ай бұрын
So have you listened to My Tam CD?
@FINXainarskrastins
@FINXainarskrastins 4 ай бұрын
Le me in the shower trying to hear baka mitai in my head together with the canon D melody lol
@looseburdens4259
@looseburdens4259 5 ай бұрын
Grandma reveal at 100k subs pls
@AttacMage
@AttacMage 10 ай бұрын
shoutouts to grandma
@jimbo49boi92
@jimbo49boi92 2 ай бұрын
Marty Friedman referenced!!!!
@VanNessy97
@VanNessy97 Жыл бұрын
I feel like Mousou Express is a dark reflection or a shadow of this chord progression...
@dj_b055
@dj_b055 5 ай бұрын
I would love to see an analysis of Mousou Express. Best monogatari opening for me, such a cool piece
@domukaz
@domukaz 4 ай бұрын
Shoutout to grandma and her ringtone
@vgmbard3136
@vgmbard3136 2 жыл бұрын
One of the best videos on this topic. Hi grandma!
@Lanes100
@Lanes100 5 ай бұрын
POMPLAMOOSE MENTIONED ❤❤❤❤
@r0nyyn303
@r0nyyn303 Ай бұрын
Shout out to grandma
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