Not even 5 minutes in and I can already tell you've done a great job. Harmony is such a nice and tricky tool in the box of any composer/producer, it can make or break a tune. Thanks.
I've been trying to understand the structure of harmonization for many years but with little success. You have taught me more in just under 14 minutes!! I will practise pentatonic scales more diligently from now on. Thank you very much.
This wasn't an advertisement for pentatonic scales - I in fact don't particularly like them (albeit appreciate their utility). However, they're an important tool and a great place to start, and you definitely won't go wrong practicing them. Good luck!
The example at 11:10 just blows my mind. Phew. I wish I could come to write music like that on purpose, by design. What you've explained does really help, maybe focusing on building a chord progression with such simple steps explained in the first half is the way to go. Thank you!
Try taking the concepts laid out here and applying them to another pentatonic melody. See how they sound to your ears. Only by trying out these ideas with different melodies in different contexts will you come to internalize them and learn what works for you and what doesn't.
Thank you for this amazing tutorial on harmonization. Over the years I’ve wondered how musicians come up with unique and interesting harmonizations of well-known melodies (eg, the happy birthday song) and this helps demystify the process. You are a great teacher!
I love that you used a nice mellow sound. my students ask me about this all the time - this is a great resource for me to give them I love that you wrote out the scales - I can like literally used this in class
This is nicely done, the concept of moving the chords around the constant melody. Ive always been frightened of chord subs, parallel keys et c....seems ive been doing it all along! The extended voicings are sophisticated, i like to use the term "harmonic consistency". Thx
Awesome. I have a personal soft spot for something you'd might call "progressive pop", which uses advanced harmonic and rhythmic idioms but pop-like melodies/arrangements.
@@MangoldProject Oh wow I'm going to call it that too from now! I absolutely have a soft spot for that too. Kinda why I love J-pop, a lot of the music is obviously not necessarily "out there" but the composers are not afraid of putting some real spice in there once in a while.
Thanks! I would make more with vocals but they get (erroneously) copyright-claimed and it's just the most annoying thing I've encountered on this platform.
like you said, borrowing chords from the major mode can improve the progression al lot, but in 8:00 and 11:22 the Bm and D chords are a different case, I think that these two chords work well cuz they're from the dorian mode, that is a minor mode too. thanks for the video, it helped me a lot
maj9 sounds appealing. In my finding the quality of a song beside extension rafinesse is very much defined by the authentic feel of lyrics and harmony. so three or four fundamental chords can change a whole world. listen to duke Ellington and satin Doll. Few extensions great outcome of ground breaking ideas.
The example at 8:30 is something that sounds very good to me. I would listen to that record. 😄 Is my intuition right, when I think that the harmony comes first and then the melody is created and then you can redo the harmony to make it even more interesting? Melody alone feels disembodied. I play bass (the only instrument that I still posses) and it's fairly rough to decide what chord changes I want to fit to that bass line - too many choices. But if I decide on a harmony first, then I can easily adapt a decent melody and groove to it. I don't know. I don't want to sound like I undermine what you did here - that makes perfect sense. I just wonder.
There's no right way to do it. Michael Jackson would record himself singing, and then even harmonize his singing. The full harmonization would only come later while working with his producer. There are opposite approaches as well, and it's very personal and even changes between songs. Sometimes it even comes together at once, like some IKEA furniture where all the parts come together simultaneously. Writing good songs is hard because there are no clear rules for doing so :)
@MangoldProject is possible to make a video about the "clash" u always mention. I mean ...an inside on how to cleary see these moments. I think u dont have a video especific on this topic! would help a lotta people. thx btw amazing class that show me I was feared about try something different cause of nowadays style music.
What made you choose those "random" chords and voicings to harmonize with the melody? Some in root and some inversions. I understand you didn't want too much dissonance from the melody but was there any specific voice leading or feelings you had in mind?
There are two questions there. These aren't "random" chords - they're mostly from the key in question, and mostly follow the most basic functional harmony pattern: subdominant to dominant to root (4-5-1, or Dm-Em-Am). If you want to know more about functional harmony, try my jazz piano online harmony course here on TH-cam (free, of course!): th-cam.com/video/fJAIx_P7NKY/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=MangoldProject As for inversions, these are chosen to minimize motion between chord notes and allow for smooth voice leading. For F, G, Am, I could've started with any inversion for, say, F, and choose the subsequent inversions for G and Am to minimize motion between them. Results would not appreciably differ.
I haven't watched the video yet (I'm going to don't worry), but how does the chord in the thumbnail make sense? An 11th is just a fourth displaced an octave, so wouldn't it be a D9sus4 or a D11 with the third omitted?
Either would make sense. Probably a D9sus4 would be a little more economic. A sus4 suffix simply means the 3rd is replaced by the 4th, so D11=D, F#, A, C, E, G, while D11sus4 = D G A C E G.
Are you asking *why* these chords work? I explain that briefly in the video. You can select from the magic chords in any order, you'll always sound good.
@@MangoldProjectthanks for the reply. I am asking how do I figure out magic chords for other keys for other pentatonic scales? How do I figure them out for major scale etc.
@@EE-yv7xg Ahhh ... You transpose! This entire example was in A minor pentatonic, and the chords were Am, C, F, G. Now transpose up, say, 3 semitones. A becomes C, C becomes Eb, F becomes Ab, G becomes Bb. So: For the C minor pentatonic, the magic chords are Cm, Eb, Ab, Bb. Another example (see if you can work it out): For D minor pentatonic, the chords are Dm, F, Bb, C. If you need help transposing stuff ... well TH-cam is your friend again :) I don't have a video on this but I'm sure a quick search will get you there easily.
It's because the Fmaj9add13 chord (F,, A, C, E, G, D) contains the A minor pentatonic scale. In other words, you're playing over the notes of the (extended) F major chord.
@@MangoldProject thanks! I’m at a point where I think I have understood the theoretical concepts to a good point but I’m hypervigilent to spot the errors in my understanding. I appreciate your response!
Dsus4 = DGA. Dm11 = DFA---G. D11sus4 = DGA--G = Dsus4 with double sus4 which is not a good idea because of doubling a tension. Hence D11sus4 is in fact not a unique chord at all.
Define unique. Is a unique chord one in which you don't double tensions? Why would you avoid that? There are plenty of chords where you double tensions.
@@MangoldProject I mean double tensions as twice the same one. Since more complex chords have enough notes in them already we have to distribute them logically under the fingers, especially on guitar. So, doubling a tension (I mean playing for example the b9 twice) will occupy another finger for a note that is already there. That's also the reason we mostly omit the 5 of a chord unless it's # or b. Then there is also the fact that doubling notes in a chord might not always sound that good. In classical harmony fot instance it is better not to double the third in a chord because it can lead to voice leading problems and result in uneanted parallel motion. AND there is also a tuning problem when you double notes between different instruments, therefor if a band has a piano player the guitarist needs to hold back on playing all the tensions in a chord because the pianist is assumedly playing them already.
@@MangoldProject Define unique: D G A G is not a unique cord in itself with the name D11sus4. D11sus4 does not excist as a name to describe a chord because it is just Dsus4 with the sus four twice in it. A unique chord is in my book a chord with a non ambigiuos structure, like A major vs. a minor.
The melody you selected to be harmonized was already internally harmonized. They were not pure fundamental tones but synthetically enriched with harmonics. Why would you do this?
@@MangoldProject A fundamental tone (a pure sine wave) by definition is absent inherent harmonics. The synthetic tones in this melody were saturated with inherent harmonics (internal harmony). If you're trying illustrate the art of external harmonization; assigning supporting chords, you should use fundamental melody tones. Raising the presence of the harmonics to the same level as the fundamental confuses the ear, especially of a beginner.
@@zoktoberfest You could equally say that a single piano note is "unpure". ANY tone has harmonics. Would you argue that you cannot play a chord on the piano because the "internal harmonization" of each piano note clash with the chord somehow? This is certainly not the case. Nor do the harmonics in the melody interfere in any way shape or form with the listener's ability to uniquely determine the pitch of the melody at any point. I'm still unsure why or when exactly the "internal harmonization" is an issue. If you want to provide some quantitative analysis, such as talking about say ratio of power in the harmonics measured in the signals' Fourier Transform to the power in the fundamental, and when this becomes "too large" (with some sound reasoning), maybe we could have an informed discussion. Otherwise, I'll have to disagree.
@@MangoldProject I wasn't referring to the natural harmonic series produced by say a concert piano. Those tones are proportional to the fundamental and define a unique timbre. I was specifically referring to the synthetically generated melodic tones used in the opening of this harmonizing tutorial; that were in no way proportional nor indicative of a recognizable timbre.
The name D11sus4 is as silly and redundant as saying Cmaj7 w/major 3rd. You’re referring to one of the chord tones TWICE in the name. You can’t extend to an 11th when there’s already a suspended 4th. It’s a D9sus. You didn’t have to specify that it’s the 4th being suspended because the 2nd is already busy being a 9th as evidenced by the name.
I'm checking out right out after the lyrics for your fist sample. Be careful what you share because it acts as an endorsement, and endorsing sinful practices and lifestyles might get you likes and subs, but those things will be your noose in the end.
Another useless video about harmonizing. I dont want to know the chords for my melodies. I allready have them OFFCOURSE. I WANT TO HARMONIZE THE MELODY WITH 2 OR MORE melodies that are the same but each fullfill each other. Like when 2 or more guitars play thd same Solo with differend notes, but they all blend to one nice melody. I need the basic rules for that. But all the internet is just full of this chord shit. HELLO?
It's very easy, just take the chord shit and then do some crap with it, and pile some more shit on top of it. Then put the melody on top of that, and some more shit on top.
@@MangoldProject exactly! the sample actually it's not fantastic but you shows really well how to make sounds much better even a mediocre melody, really cool vid
@@gasparucciox9706 When it went live, the video got a copyright strike, because apparently the same (royalty-free) sample was used in another song as well. Welcome to TH-cam, where effort is rewarded ... !
@@MangoldProject there are those huge sample data base now , producers buy any kind of samples there : chords, vocals, beats etc for a quite cheap price and they just assemble those samples togheter without playing a single note and..... believe it or not , sometimes they do hits out pf this!......it's quire sad , it's kind of death of music as we knew it....isn't?
@@gasparucciox9706 I don't care if some other producer made a hit out of it, all the more power to them. Just don't copyright strike my own video, which uses the same (royalty free!) sample ... Geez, some lawyers have too much free time on their hands.
There was a cat cameo right around the sus chord explanation lol. Cats dig theory, too 😸
Only Kool Kats
My cats in particular.
I heard that too 🐈
Dear sir, l like your idea of there is no right or wrong to harmonize a melody. Thank you very much.
You are most welcome.
Not even 5 minutes in and I can already tell you've done a great job. Harmony is such a nice and tricky tool in the box of any composer/producer, it can make or break a tune. Thanks.
I've been trying to understand the structure of harmonization for many years but with little success. You have taught me more in just under 14 minutes!! I will practise pentatonic scales more diligently from now on. Thank you very much.
This wasn't an advertisement for pentatonic scales - I in fact don't particularly like them (albeit appreciate their utility). However, they're an important tool and a great place to start, and you definitely won't go wrong practicing them. Good luck!
The example at 11:10 just blows my mind. Phew. I wish I could come to write music like that on purpose, by design. What you've explained does really help, maybe focusing on building a chord progression with such simple steps explained in the first half is the way to go. Thank you!
Try taking the concepts laid out here and applying them to another pentatonic melody. See how they sound to your ears. Only by trying out these ideas with different melodies in different contexts will you come to internalize them and learn what works for you and what doesn't.
the cat meow
Thank you for this amazing tutorial on harmonization. Over the years I’ve wondered how musicians come up with unique and interesting harmonizations of well-known melodies (eg, the happy birthday song) and this helps demystify the process. You are a great teacher!
Super useful to come back to for ideas when my progression needs a new direction. Thank you Assaf.
Sure thing!
Love your channel for many years now
Thanks man, or woman, or large snowy mountain! All are welcome here. :)
I love that you used a nice mellow sound. my students ask me about this all the time - this is a great resource for me to give them I love that you wrote out the scales - I can like literally used this in class
This is nicely done, the concept of moving the chords around the constant melody. Ive always been frightened of chord subs, parallel keys et c....seems ive been doing it all along! The extended voicings are sophisticated, i like to use the term "harmonic consistency". Thx
Never heard the term "harmonic consistency", but it's an interesting observation. Thanks for sharing.
@MangoldProject For me it's efficiency, minimal voicing changes and subtle differences between chords. It's a term I took from Robben Ford.
Amazing tutorial again sir
This lesson is very helpful and you make the concepts easy to understand. Thank you!
Very helpful explanation and demonstration 🎶👍🏽
This is so cool! Thank you.
Very good thank you
I watch your videos on repeat to soak in every detail. Your videos are presented in a way which is easy to understand. Fantastic work!!
Thank you very much!
I could watch this video over and over again.... As a matter of fact, I will
Awesome! Just leave it running in the background, that will make TH-cam recommend it to others more often :)
Brilliant. Very well done. Thank You.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I love this video and I'm glad you chose a pop-like melody!!! Cool tips and thanks.
Awesome. I have a personal soft spot for something you'd might call "progressive pop", which uses advanced harmonic and rhythmic idioms but pop-like melodies/arrangements.
@@MangoldProject Oh wow I'm going to call it that too from now! I absolutely have a soft spot for that too. Kinda why I love J-pop, a lot of the music is obviously not necessarily "out there" but the composers are not afraid of putting some real spice in there once in a while.
The Aai continues to amaze and astound. 😮
Aai?
Brilliant, thanks
Thank you so much for this video. It super interesting and inspiring 😊
One of your best videos.
Thanks! I would make more with vocals but they get (erroneously) copyright-claimed and it's just the most annoying thing I've encountered on this platform.
Thank you very much. This video has clarified the topic for me
Great!
you're simply one of the best
No, you are! :)
11:13 was a flex... and it was amazing.
Thanks - although I thought I had built towards that point quite methodically!
Thx, great summary, very interesting 👍
Awesome.
Amazing video, thank you very much!!!
You are welcome!
like you said, borrowing chords from the major mode can improve the progression al lot, but in 8:00 and 11:22 the Bm and D chords are a different case, I think that these two chords work well cuz they're from the dorian mode, that is a minor mode too. thanks for the video, it helped me a lot
Often, in music, there is more than one way to look at things. It's good that you're trying to find other ways.
I would love to learn this. Cant wait
Well, soon you won't have to!
I can't wait
Thank you, very usefully, you are the best !
You're welcome!
Brilliant. Hope to see you in the Top 40 soon 🙂
Haha, not even in the Top 400 :)
Great video
Very interesting sir
Wow nice explain.i love it❤
Love this. Thank you
Awesome!
Glad you enjoyed it.
Hi, the best teacher. Could you please teach us more on ear training?
What would you like to learn?
Thanks
maj9 sounds appealing. In my finding the quality of a song beside extension rafinesse is very much defined by the authentic feel of lyrics and harmony. so three or four fundamental chords can change a whole world. listen to duke Ellington and satin Doll. Few extensions great outcome of ground breaking ideas.
Im waiting for this video
2:31 I really love when it go *GADAGADAGADA*
good video!
Thanks!
The example at 8:30 is something that sounds very good to me. I would listen to that record. 😄 Is my intuition right, when I think that the harmony comes first and then the melody is created and then you can redo the harmony to make it even more interesting? Melody alone feels disembodied. I play bass (the only instrument that I still posses) and it's fairly rough to decide what chord changes I want to fit to that bass line - too many choices. But if I decide on a harmony first, then I can easily adapt a decent melody and groove to it. I don't know. I don't want to sound like I undermine what you did here - that makes perfect sense. I just wonder.
There's no right way to do it. Michael Jackson would record himself singing, and then even harmonize his singing. The full harmonization would only come later while working with his producer. There are opposite approaches as well, and it's very personal and even changes between songs. Sometimes it even comes together at once, like some IKEA furniture where all the parts come together simultaneously. Writing good songs is hard because there are no clear rules for doing so :)
@@MangoldProject Ahh MJ was a genius and one of my top 5 favorites. Thank you kindly for your answer. Have a good day or night!
nice!!!
Thanks!
@MangoldProject is possible to make a video about the "clash" u always mention. I mean ...an inside on how to cleary see these moments. I think u dont have a video especific on this topic! would help a lotta people. thx btw amazing class that show me I was feared about try something different cause of nowadays style music.
Are you referring to the clash between the chord and the melody?
@@MangoldProject yes!!! u always mention.
❤❤❤❤
What made you choose those "random" chords and voicings to harmonize with the melody? Some in root and some inversions. I understand you didn't want too much dissonance from the melody but was there any specific voice leading or feelings you had in mind?
There are two questions there. These aren't "random" chords - they're mostly from the key in question, and mostly follow the most basic functional harmony pattern: subdominant to dominant to root (4-5-1, or Dm-Em-Am). If you want to know more about functional harmony, try my jazz piano online harmony course here on TH-cam (free, of course!):
th-cam.com/video/fJAIx_P7NKY/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=MangoldProject
As for inversions, these are chosen to minimize motion between chord notes and allow for smooth voice leading. For F, G, Am, I could've started with any inversion for, say, F, and choose the subsequent inversions for G and Am to minimize motion between them. Results would not appreciably differ.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
I haven't watched the video yet (I'm going to don't worry), but how does the chord in the thumbnail make sense? An 11th is just a fourth displaced an octave, so wouldn't it be a D9sus4 or a D11 with the third omitted?
Either would make sense. Probably a D9sus4 would be a little more economic. A sus4 suffix simply means the 3rd is replaced by the 4th, so D11=D, F#, A, C, E, G, while D11sus4 = D G A C E G.
What is playing like that constant sound while every chord and every progression is being played
That might be the bass.
@@MangoldProject what note is that bass in in ?and which bass you used?
That was pure mangold
Imitated, but never duplicated!
@MangoldProject what note is that bass in in ?and which bass you used?
I always use the root of the chord in this example.
How did you know the magical
Chords for a minor pentatonic scale that clash the least at 2:56
Are you asking *why* these chords work? I explain that briefly in the video.
You can select from the magic chords in any order, you'll always sound good.
@@MangoldProjectthanks for the reply.
I am asking how do I figure out magic chords for other keys for other pentatonic scales?
How do I figure them out for major scale etc.
@@EE-yv7xg Ahhh ... You transpose! This entire example was in A minor pentatonic, and the chords were Am, C, F, G.
Now transpose up, say, 3 semitones. A becomes C, C becomes Eb, F becomes Ab, G becomes Bb. So: For the C minor pentatonic, the magic chords are Cm, Eb, Ab, Bb.
Another example (see if you can work it out): For D minor pentatonic, the chords are Dm, F, Bb, C.
If you need help transposing stuff ... well TH-cam is your friend again :) I don't have a video on this but I'm sure a quick search will get you there easily.
@@MangoldProject oo I get it now :)
What would be the magic chords for Cmajor scale/ A minor scale (not pentatonic)?
@@EE-yv7xg Minor non-pentatonic scales fare similarly to penatonic ones. So for A minor (say Aeolian) it's the same chords as for A minor pentatonic.
11 is the same as 4
But what I don’t understand is why the a minor pentatonic can play over the F major chord when the F note is not in the a minor pentatonic scale.
It's because the Fmaj9add13 chord (F,, A, C, E, G, D) contains the A minor pentatonic scale. In other words, you're playing over the notes of the (extended) F major chord.
@@MangoldProject ok thank you so much for your reply
Hey, so isn’t an 11sus4 actually a 9sus4? (Because the 4 and 11 are the same scale degree that is)
Yep, pretty much.
@@MangoldProject thanks! I’m at a point where I think I have understood the theoretical concepts to a good point but I’m hypervigilent to spot the errors in my understanding. I appreciate your response!
Dsus4 = DGA. Dm11 = DFA---G. D11sus4 = DGA--G = Dsus4 with double sus4 which is not a good idea because of doubling a tension. Hence D11sus4 is in fact not a unique chord at all.
Define unique. Is a unique chord one in which you don't double tensions? Why would you avoid that? There are plenty of chords where you double tensions.
@@MangoldProject I mean double tensions as twice the same one. Since more complex chords have enough notes in them already we have to distribute them logically under the fingers, especially on guitar. So, doubling a tension (I mean playing for example the b9 twice) will occupy another finger for a note that is already there. That's also the reason we mostly omit the 5 of a chord unless it's # or b. Then there is also the fact that doubling notes in a chord might not always sound that good. In classical harmony fot instance it is better not to double the third in a chord because it can lead to voice leading problems and result in uneanted parallel motion. AND there is also a tuning problem when you double notes between different instruments, therefor if a band has a piano player the guitarist needs to hold back on playing all the tensions in a chord because the pianist is assumedly playing them already.
@@MangoldProject Define unique: D G A G is not a unique cord in itself with the name D11sus4. D11sus4 does not excist as a name to describe a chord because it is just Dsus4 with the sus four twice in it. A unique chord is in my book a chord with a non ambigiuos structure, like A major vs. a minor.
The melody you selected to be harmonized was already internally harmonized. They were not pure fundamental tones but synthetically enriched with harmonics. Why would you do this?
What is internally harmonized? Do you mean the vocals harmonize each other? No, it's doubled via repeated dubbings. All notes have the same pitch.
@@MangoldProject A fundamental tone (a pure sine wave) by definition is absent inherent harmonics. The synthetic tones in this melody were saturated with inherent harmonics (internal harmony). If you're trying illustrate the art of external harmonization; assigning supporting chords, you should use fundamental melody tones. Raising the presence of the harmonics to the same level as the fundamental confuses the ear, especially of a beginner.
@@zoktoberfest You could equally say that a single piano note is "unpure". ANY tone has harmonics. Would you argue that you cannot play a chord on the piano because the "internal harmonization" of each piano note clash with the chord somehow? This is certainly not the case.
Nor do the harmonics in the melody interfere in any way shape or form with the listener's ability to uniquely determine the pitch of the melody at any point.
I'm still unsure why or when exactly the "internal harmonization" is an issue. If you want to provide some quantitative analysis, such as talking about say ratio of power in the harmonics measured in the signals' Fourier Transform to the power in the fundamental, and when this becomes "too large" (with some sound reasoning), maybe we could have an informed discussion. Otherwise, I'll have to disagree.
@@MangoldProject I wasn't referring to the natural harmonic series produced by say a concert piano. Those tones are proportional to the fundamental and define a unique timbre. I was specifically referring to the synthetically generated melodic tones used in the opening of this harmonizing tutorial; that were in no way proportional nor indicative of a recognizable timbre.
Love the theory, hate the melody.
Well, it's more about the concepts. Go forth and apply it to a melody you like!
The name D11sus4 is as silly and redundant as saying Cmaj7 w/major 3rd. You’re referring to one of the chord tones TWICE in the name. You can’t extend to an 11th when there’s already a suspended 4th. It’s a D9sus. You didn’t have to specify that it’s the 4th being suspended because the 2nd is already busy being a 9th as evidenced by the name.
Two simple questions.
1. Would a D11 include F#?
2. Would a D11sus4 include F#?
I'm checking out right out after the lyrics for your fist sample. Be careful what you share because it acts as an endorsement, and endorsing sinful practices and lifestyles might get you likes and subs, but those things will be your noose in the end.
I have no idea what you're talking about, but sorry to see you go. I hope you'll come back.
@@MangoldProject Pay attention to the lyrics for the first sample you shared.
What’s up with that angel? Is it doing devil horns or is that just AI nightmare fuel?
It's Bing Image Creator for the rescue!
11sus4?????????????? wtf
Another useless video about harmonizing. I dont want to know the chords for my melodies. I allready have them OFFCOURSE. I WANT TO HARMONIZE THE MELODY WITH 2 OR MORE melodies that are the same but each fullfill each other. Like when 2 or more guitars play thd same Solo with differend notes, but they all blend to one nice melody.
I need the basic rules for that. But all the internet is just full of this chord shit. HELLO?
It's very easy, just take the chord shit and then do some crap with it, and pile some more shit on top of it. Then put the melody on top of that, and some more shit on top.
really good, thanks
Thanks! I think this is the first time I use a vocal sample in my lessons. It really gets you thinking in a way instrumental music does not.
@@MangoldProject exactly! the sample actually it's not fantastic but you shows really well how to make sounds much better even a mediocre melody, really cool vid
@@gasparucciox9706 When it went live, the video got a copyright strike, because apparently the same (royalty-free) sample was used in another song as well. Welcome to TH-cam, where effort is rewarded ... !
@@MangoldProject there are those huge sample data base now , producers buy any kind of samples there : chords, vocals, beats etc for a quite cheap price and they just assemble those samples togheter without playing a single note and..... believe it or not , sometimes they do hits out pf this!......it's quire sad , it's kind of death of music as we knew it....isn't?
@@gasparucciox9706 I don't care if some other producer made a hit out of it, all the more power to them. Just don't copyright strike my own video, which uses the same (royalty free!) sample ... Geez, some lawyers have too much free time on their hands.