Thursday, February 2, 2017

Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs

View Video Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Free Mp3 Download
Download Lagu Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Full
Free Mp3 Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Full
Free Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Download Mp3

This Video Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Rating : 4.83 Can Download via formats webm, Mp4 High, Mp4 Low, Avi, 3gp High, 3gp Low, Mp3 With Software Video Download, and You can Download MP3 High Quality via button download in above / bellow, This Mp3 / Music Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs support Your Mobile or PC browser.




Screnshoot :

Piano Tutorial: Adele's
Video Info :

Release : 2014-11-07 01:08:33
View Videos : 56962
Video Duration : 1415322513
Video Like : 285
Source Video : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=saPXKfaHC60
Download MP3 : check download link bellow or above

Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Free Download
Piano Tutorial: Adele's "Someone Like You" & Other 4-Chord Songs Mp3 Original


Learn to accompany Someone Like You, No One, She Will be Loved, & other songs (see list below) that use the 1-5-6-4 chord progression. Go to http://www.doctorkeys.com/ for the rest of this course, as well as many other tutorials.

This video is the first lesson in my newest course, Pop Piano Accompaniment.

From the opening of the video:

Here's a question for you. What do all these songs have in common?

Someone Like You, No One, She Will Be Loved, You're Beautiful, With or Without You, Can You Feel the Love Tonight, Forever Young, Let it Be, Under the Bridge, No Woman No Cry, Land Down Under, So Lonely, Happy Ending, Fall at Your Feet, When I Come Around.

Well, the answer is that they all share a particular sequence of chords -- a chord progression, as we call it. If we're playing in the key of C, all these songs use these chords, in this order: C, G, A minor, F.

If we assign scale-step numbers to the chord roots instead of letters, that's 1-5-6-4. (Using numbers makes it easier to transpose a song into any key.)

Now some of the songs stick entirely, or almost entirely, to this progression, all the way through the song. Others use it just for the verse or chorus.

But the point is--if you can play this chord sequence, you're well on your way to being able to play all those songs, and many others.

In this lesson and the next, you're gonna learn to play this progression using a variety of rhythmic piano styles, and we'll match up each song in our list with the style or styles best suited to it.

As usual with my DoctorKeys tutorials, I also discuss the physical aspects -- how to play with a relaxed, efficient, piano technique.

Dont Forget share this blog in your social e.g : facebook, twitter, and more
Share:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Blog Archive

Labels

Recent Posts

Pages