I don't have anything to add, just leaving a comment for audience engagement so are you aren't punished for taking the original down and improving your content. Have a nice week!
@@rokzakrajsek9864 well, I'd definitely recommend samba and bossa nova for the 'pure brazilian' sound. Tom Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes, Elis Regina, João Gilberto, Baden Powell, those are bossa legends. As for the samba classics, I'd recommend Demônios da Garoa, Adoniran Barbosa, Bezerra da Silva, Martinho da Vila. MPB, another very popular genre in Brazil, its biggest names are Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Chico Buarque, Milton Nascimento. Tim Maia explored samba, funk, soul and rock in his songs. Djavan is one of my favorites with his funk/soul. If you're into rock, Brazil produced lots of psychedelic rock artists during the tropicalia movement. Os Mutantes is probably our biggest name, but I really like how Novos Baianos threw our brazilian sounds (samba, choro, bossa nova and etc) into a psychedelic rock outfit with beautiful eletric guitars (listen to one of these: Mistérios do Planeta, Dê um Rolê, A Menina Dança or 29 Beijos). Honestly, I'd say that this psychedelic brazilian rock is one of my favorite brazilian genres. For one of our very traditional and popular genres, choro, definitely listen to our maestro Pixinguinha, a legend. Although I'm not too much into it, axé is also a very popular genre, along with our 'funk' (which is a very bass-heavy electronic simple genre mostly based on samples, and it has nothing to do with the american funk). There are also lots of modern artists that incorporate our music in other international genres. Hope it helps!
@@AntonioZL Holy cow what a list! :D I appreciate you taking your time to cover so many genres and artists :) I'll start listening asap. It's summer and hot so it's perfect :D btw as a guitar guy bossanova fascinates me. I just love the chords and progressions. Oh it helps believe me! Thanks ;)
@@rokzakrajsek9864 Antonio up there did give you a lot, so I'll try to reinforce the ones I think are the most importat of his list, and give you just a few more option on the rock spectrum. Starting by the rock genres, Mutantes are indeed very important; other stuff I'd recomend is: Secos & Molhados - which has a man singing, and you'll know why this is important as soon as you hit play; from the 80's and 90's, you should give a chance to Paralamas do Sucesso, Engenheiros do Hawaii, Legião Urbana, and Lobão. Lobão's "MTV Acoustic" is my favorite acoustic ever. Into the 2000's, Cachorro Grande is kind of off-mainstream, but they play a great hard rock. For heavier stuff: Ratos de Porão are considered the first hardcore band worldwide. We also have Sepultura in the thrash-metal thing - I don't even like the style and still recognize their work is superb. Finally, if you're into melodic metal, Angra and Shamaan are very good and quite known overseas. ____ For the bossa nova, Tom Jobim and João Gilberto are indeed, and Elis Regina is the most famous singer in here, I guess. Demonios da Garoa are the kings of classic samba, with tens of the most popular songs of the style. On the MPB list, Chico Buarque would be my favorite pick, particularly his album "Construção".
@@AntonioZL I'm late, but really wanna thank you as well, currently enjoying Bezerra da Silva - A Semente. I've always wanted to research these genres but moved on too soon, only coming across stuff that wasn't quite what I was after, was just about to delve into this stuff so thank you for what seems like a great start.
I have very little formal education on music theory, but I was surprised by how for I've come and how much I've been able understand thanks to TH-cam content creators like yourself. You guys have been such a blessing ❤
Going to use this opportunity to recommend you Hermeto Pascoal, Brazil's music wizard. He is a really fun guy and a self taught genious. A great start is the album "Festa dos Deuses" wich has a nice range of textures and great melodies (including his version of "round midnight")
As a Brazilian old man, who is almost illiterate in music, I must say that your analysis is just perfect! I was always intrigued why some of our music is kinda hard to understand, even if it's so beautiful to listen to. Now, I have a clue Thanks! I love the funny analogies, too. And yes, Jobim was really a genius!
I love this video, I’ve been working on making chord progressions with secondary dominants and tritone substitutions which I thought sounded jazzy af but this is on another level.
As a fellow Brazilian viewer, I totally agree. I love Ben and after this video, I’m loving him even more. “Chega de Saudade” is definitely one of our musical masterpieces
I think I learned more about harmonic progressions in these 15 minutes than I did back in the '90s in 3 years of high school jazz band, 4 years of college jazz band, and 2 years of music theory courses… while obtaining a B.A. in music.
The thing I like the most about this song is that the first half is in Minor, and the lyrics are sad, but then the second half it goes to major and both the music and lyrics become happier, or kinda excited. It's a nice touch, and shows you how well composed it is.
Awesome video! Thanks for your work!! And also, as you may or may not know, mr. João Gilberto has passed away recently. Truly the trailblazer of bossa, a giant in his own weird, perfectionist way. I'm inclined to consider this video a truly happy hommage to him! Thanks!
What!? no way I was just about to learn to play this song, it's so popular here it's almost a folk tune we grow up listening, really cool to see it analysed! Also amazing of you to analyse such a beautiful brazillian samba! Greetings from Brasil!
masterful grassroots assessment - showing us clues, not as a professor. but as a wonderful peer grade A student helping us understand this beautiful piece in it's full complexity. I will need to watch a second, maybe third time, to realise, and I did notice a jazz reharmonization, that opened my eyes "ahhhh". but i had too much fun going to grandma's so I lost track a bit.
Thank you for such a wonderfully playful presentation of music theory. It helps off-set the anxiety of not meeting others expectations of pace. Arigatou, shinsetsu na hito arimasu.
You’re the best Ben! Love this song. I’ve been trying to learn this since you posted the original. Great teacher and very humble. Keep up the great work!
I think another way to think of that Dmin7-E7-Emin7b5-A7-Dmin7 progression is that D minor is your home country and youre moving to A major (or mixolydian or phyrigian dominant because its an A7 that the secondary dominant E7 resolves to), but while you're living there you eat at a D minor restaurant and have some Emin7b5 which reminds you of D minor and makes the journey back (Emin7b5-A7-Dmin7 being a ii-V-i to D) a lot easier.
thank you very much!, i transcribed this piece from Joao's version in Violao e voz (2000), and i truly never understood the real conection between the real book part and the one Gilberto was playing, by the way, he plays that one in c minor. but the original version is in D minor!
Brazilian here. Antonio Carlos "Tom" Jobim is a motherfucking genius, in my opinion, the godfather of modern brazilian music. Brazilians don't realize it, but we listen to his legacy on every day life. And João Gilberto is underrated, because he is one of the best jazz guitar players to ever walk the earth, he had perfect pitch on a serious Sayajin level and developed this "thumb/bass drum-fingers 234/snare bossa nova way of playing" all by himself in two days. Sorry about the big comment, but bossa nova is the genre of my life.
So glad to see this video! It makes me like this song even more. Don't know if you also take the time to get the lyrics, but you should. Thank you for this upload and keep up your awesome content! Hugs from Brazil!
Hi, Ben, great analysis I really enjoyed and that's a nice version, but here in Brazil we tend to play a little bit different, it's not such a big change, but if you're interested check out the version on Tom Jobim's Songbook, you can find the 3 volumes in pdf online with the score, the chords and the lyrics in portuguese and in english, we're used to look at it as the "official version".
Another fun little reason that could theoretically justify that Bb-6 to Dm is a combination of two concepts I'm particularly fascinated by: negative harmony and substitute dominants from the octatonic scale. In short, the negative of the V7 in any key is the iv-6, and a substitute dominant from octatonic is any dominant (or in this case negative dominant, the minor 6) a minor third from the root of the starting chord. In the key of D, the negative of A7 is G-6, which then gets substituted up a minor third to get Bb-6.
ngl i cracked up on the first times you started cursing in the latter half, I got caught off guard This video exudes a helluva lotta passion. I loved the textures of the synths you were using to exhibit the different progression cases. I hope you're not going anywhere anytime soon. :P
I don't think these are the chords played in the original recording. They work fine as substitutions and probably make for more standard progressions, almost as if the original chords are the substitutions and these were the real ones. But I'd love an analysis of those, with all the extensions and diminished chords!
Just today my brother was telling me how Jobim managed to write the second most played song in the world with the melody starting on the 9th, and in fact not having the tonic until the 4th/5th measure of the song. Girl from Ipanema sounds so simple and yet it's so complex, like this one. :)
This is a beautiful song in every possible way, including lyrics. Vinicius de Moraes knew his way around the Portuguese language just like Tom Jobim knew music.
I wish I understood what the R you are explaining in this video. I have been listening to your latest album(that I purchased & downloaded) I can’t think of a song with a better introduction than your song ‘I love you’. I am a huge John frusciante fan; he made me want to play guitar 30 years ago, but your choices speak to me even more. Ta.
Thanks for the clip. I really like your choice of songs and am grateful for you bringing it to my attention. I may have to put it on that long list of tunes I am learning. Your voicings and movement sounded delicious. Around 11:14, where you are looking at the movement from F#-7 to F dim7 to E-7, I find myself thinking of a chord scales progression a friend showed me. It had the usual chords for every note in the scale and in-between those (the dissonant out of key root notes) this guitarist used a diminished chord so each of the twelve notes had a chord. Is there a name for that? Could that be another way of looking at this movement? I am curious about chordal scales and enjoy learning about more about how people look at chord movements from that perspective. In my earlier comment... I felt compelled to use the M roman numeral for the momentary and swiftly passing joy of being the slightly significant 1000's like. It wasn't a Major thing.
@@lachaineguitarededavid ye got it. but I mean that steel strings doesn't have the timbre of that kind of Brazilian music. You won't see Brazilians using steel for Bossa Nova or Samba
at 6:10 i thought that it was more about the E7 changing into a E halfdim (especially because the earlier bass note emphasised the B) so that it could be a minor ii-v-1 back to D. its not terribly different and i’m certainly not the trained professional here, im more wondering am i wrong for thinking that or just thinking a little bit differently? thanks great vid though
I don't have anything to add, just leaving a comment for audience engagement so are you aren't punished for taking the original down and improving your content. Have a nice week!
Cyan Light what a good idea
+
+
+
Your name means "quite light" in portuguese lol é nois bem levinho, tamo junto, excelent video
klexos cê é paia Zé kkkkkk
Kkkk mt bom
Carai
BEM LEVINHO hahahahaha puta merda
HAUAHAUAHAUHAUAHAU
PQP
Thanks very much for putting your ego second to getting things right. Clap clap!
Brazilian music is incredibly rich. Happy to see you exploring it.
What artists do you recommend? Rock, jazz, metal genre..or whichever genre :)
@@rokzakrajsek9864 well, I'd definitely recommend samba and bossa nova for the 'pure brazilian' sound. Tom Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes, Elis Regina, João Gilberto, Baden Powell, those are bossa legends. As for the samba classics, I'd recommend Demônios da Garoa, Adoniran Barbosa, Bezerra da Silva, Martinho da Vila. MPB, another very popular genre in Brazil, its biggest names are Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Chico Buarque, Milton Nascimento. Tim Maia explored samba, funk, soul and rock in his songs. Djavan is one of my favorites with his funk/soul. If you're into rock, Brazil produced lots of psychedelic rock artists during the tropicalia movement. Os Mutantes is probably our biggest name, but I really like how Novos Baianos threw our brazilian sounds (samba, choro, bossa nova and etc) into a psychedelic rock outfit with beautiful eletric guitars (listen to one of these: Mistérios do Planeta, Dê um Rolê, A Menina Dança or 29 Beijos). Honestly, I'd say that this psychedelic brazilian rock is one of my favorite brazilian genres. For one of our very traditional and popular genres, choro, definitely listen to our maestro Pixinguinha, a legend. Although I'm not too much into it, axé is also a very popular genre, along with our 'funk' (which is a very bass-heavy electronic simple genre mostly based on samples, and it has nothing to do with the american funk).
There are also lots of modern artists that incorporate our music in other international genres.
Hope it helps!
@@AntonioZL Holy cow what a list! :D I appreciate you taking your time to cover so many genres and artists :) I'll start listening asap. It's summer and hot so it's perfect :D btw as a guitar guy bossanova fascinates me. I just love the chords and progressions. Oh it helps believe me! Thanks ;)
@@rokzakrajsek9864 Antonio up there did give you a lot, so I'll try to reinforce the ones I think are the most importat of his list, and give you just a few more option on the rock spectrum.
Starting by the rock genres, Mutantes are indeed very important; other stuff I'd recomend is: Secos & Molhados - which has a man singing, and you'll know why this is important as soon as you hit play; from the 80's and 90's, you should give a chance to Paralamas do Sucesso, Engenheiros do Hawaii, Legião Urbana, and Lobão. Lobão's "MTV Acoustic" is my favorite acoustic ever. Into the 2000's, Cachorro Grande is kind of off-mainstream, but they play a great hard rock.
For heavier stuff: Ratos de Porão are considered the first hardcore band worldwide. We also have Sepultura in the thrash-metal thing - I don't even like the style and still recognize their work is superb. Finally, if you're into melodic metal, Angra and Shamaan are very good and quite known overseas.
____
For the bossa nova, Tom Jobim and João Gilberto are indeed, and Elis Regina is the most famous singer in here, I guess.
Demonios da Garoa are the kings of classic samba, with tens of the most popular songs of the style.
On the MPB list, Chico Buarque would be my favorite pick, particularly his album "Construção".
@@AntonioZL I'm late, but really wanna thank you as well, currently enjoying Bezerra da Silva - A Semente. I've always wanted to research these genres but moved on too soon, only coming across stuff that wasn't quite what I was after, was just about to delve into this stuff so thank you for what seems like a great start.
Always good to see someone correcting their mistakes. It builds character, like digging holes
Weird reference but ok
I have very little formal education on music theory, but I was surprised by how for I've come and how much I've been able understand thanks to TH-cam content creators like yourself. You guys have been such a blessing ❤
Going to use this opportunity to recommend you Hermeto Pascoal, Brazil's music wizard. He is a really fun guy and a self taught genious. A great start is the album "Festa dos Deuses" wich has a nice range of textures and great melodies (including his version of "round midnight")
@Ben levin read that this is important
for realllll
Hermeto Pascoal comes from my district yet i never got to see him live, i need to change that.
We have a statue of him here.
I would recommend Zabumbe-bum-a and Cerebro Magnetico
I did a gig of his music with a quintet last year, it was a really dense play!
As a Brazilian old man, who is almost illiterate in music, I must say that your analysis is just perfect! I was always intrigued why some of our music is kinda hard to understand, even if it's so beautiful to listen to. Now, I have a clue Thanks! I love the funny analogies, too. And yes, Jobim was really a genius!
Ben: "And Grandma's alone"
Me: "Awww :c"
B: "Which is what she prefers"
M: "Aww! c:"
i just realized i'm a grandma haha
@@lachaineguitarededavid Me too I suppose! 🤣
but gramma said "go home", so I think she wants to be alone
Ben, this is such a fun way teaching theory that many music teachers present boringly, keep up the good work and make more!
Take The A7 Train, by D-7 Ellington ?
Music Theory with a song I've been listening since I was a kid here in Brazil? YOS
Ben Levin is arguably the best person in the world.
I love this video, I’ve been working on making chord progressions with secondary dominants and tritone substitutions which I thought sounded jazzy af but this is on another level.
you have gained the Brazilians respect :DDDD
and earned
Bossa Nova is a beautiful genre. Saludos de Argentina.
As a fellow Brazilian viewer, I totally agree. I love Ben and after this video, I’m loving him even more. “Chega de Saudade” is definitely one of our musical masterpieces
@@fiefire1234 eu particularmente acho que ele ia adorar ser gringo aqui no Brasil
I think I learned more about harmonic progressions in these 15 minutes than I did back in the '90s in 3 years of high school jazz band, 4 years of college jazz band, and 2 years of music theory courses… while obtaining a B.A. in music.
I also laughed more.
What a great tune.
Dude what you're doing with this analisis is gold. Ive been looking for someone to explain me this stuff for weeks
The thing I like the most about this song is that the first half is in Minor, and the lyrics are sad, but then the second half it goes to major and both the music and lyrics become happier, or kinda excited. It's a nice touch, and shows you how well composed it is.
Probably my favorite educational music channel on TH-cam!
Awesome video! Thanks for your work!! And also, as you may or may not know, mr. João Gilberto has passed away recently. Truly the trailblazer of bossa, a giant in his own weird, perfectionist way. I'm inclined to consider this video a truly happy hommage to him! Thanks!
So great that we can always take it again from the top in both music and TH-cam. Nicely done Ben!
awesome analysis. You are amazing.
Thanks bro, really enjoyed this and your lighthearted style.
Achei a didática dele "Ben levinha" 🥰🤣
What!? no way I was just about to learn to play this song, it's so popular here it's almost a folk tune we grow up listening, really cool to see it analysed!
Also amazing of you to analyse such a beautiful brazillian samba! Greetings from Brasil!
masterful grassroots assessment - showing us clues, not as a professor. but as a wonderful peer grade A student helping us understand this beautiful piece in it's full complexity. I will need to watch a second, maybe third time, to realise, and I did notice a jazz reharmonization, that opened my eyes "ahhhh". but i had too much fun going to grandma's so I lost track a bit.
Thank you Ben! It helped me a lot!!!
"intermittent d diminshed 7 toilet" made me spit beans on my desk thanks
Thank you for such a wonderfully playful presentation of music theory. It helps off-set the anxiety of not meeting others expectations of pace. Arigatou, shinsetsu na hito arimasu.
more of these, this was awesome!!!
You’re the best Ben! Love this song. I’ve been trying to learn this since you posted the original. Great teacher and very humble. Keep up the great work!
thank you for introducing me to this amazing song! i've never heard it before your video
Wish I had more friends into music theory to talk about how amazing this is
I think another way to think of that Dmin7-E7-Emin7b5-A7-Dmin7 progression is that D minor is your home country and youre moving to A major (or mixolydian or phyrigian dominant because its an A7 that the secondary dominant E7 resolves to), but while you're living there you eat at a D minor restaurant and have some Emin7b5 which reminds you of D minor and makes the journey back (Emin7b5-A7-Dmin7 being a ii-V-i to D) a lot easier.
thank you very much!, i transcribed this piece from Joao's version in Violao e voz (2000), and i truly never understood the real conection between the real book part and the one Gilberto was playing, by the way, he plays that one in c minor. but the original version is in D minor!
I love this and would love to see you post harmonic Analyses time to time in addition to all the great stuff! Thanks!
I think I will do that, thank for the encouragement!
Ben, logged in just to Thumbs Up this video, really glad you re-uploaded the video improved! Keep up the good work, much love for your work!
WOW, I'm brazilian and I'm very pleased to see our music well explained to the world.
Brazilian here. Antonio Carlos "Tom" Jobim is a motherfucking genius, in my opinion, the godfather of modern brazilian music. Brazilians don't realize it, but we listen to his legacy on every day life. And João Gilberto is underrated, because he is one of the best jazz guitar players to ever walk the earth, he had perfect pitch on a serious Sayajin level and developed this "thumb/bass drum-fingers 234/snare bossa nova way of playing" all by himself in two days.
Sorry about the big comment, but bossa nova is the genre of my life.
I’m glad the pissing part wasn’t what was wrong. I got to laugh again!
I was very glad too, that's the most important moment in the whole dang thing!
Yes yes yes. My favourite bossa taught by my favourite TH-cam guitarist ;)
as a brazillian its nice to see some bossa nova in yout chanel :) tom jobim is a genius
a fair amount of D
thanks, you too :)
thats what she said
sorry
not sorry
but let’s see what else is here
Thanks for introducing me to this song that's apparently been in the real book this whole time! Thanks Ben, great video.
Love Carlos Jobim, time to learn this song. Sincerely, aspiring jazz guitarist
loved that train, it made the analysis fun to watch
Great video and effort
Thank you Ben!!!
Please release your solo guitar version somewhere it’s so good
Your right hand tone has improved a lot since I first heard it!
The first one was never recommended to me, so I’m glad I got to watch this!!
Never heard of this song but it's so beautiful! Great analysis.
So glad to see this video! It makes me like this song even more. Don't know if you also take the time to get the lyrics, but you should. Thank you for this upload and keep up your awesome content! Hugs from Brazil!
this guy is a genius
Hi, Ben, great analysis I really enjoyed and that's a nice version, but here in Brazil we tend to play a little bit different, it's not such a big change, but if you're interested check out the version on Tom Jobim's Songbook, you can find the 3 volumes in pdf online with the score, the chords and the lyrics in portuguese and in english, we're used to look at it as the "official version".
Another fun little reason that could theoretically justify that Bb-6 to Dm is a combination of two concepts I'm particularly fascinated by: negative harmony and substitute dominants from the octatonic scale.
In short, the negative of the V7 in any key is the iv-6, and a substitute dominant from octatonic is any dominant (or in this case negative dominant, the minor 6) a minor third from the root of the starting chord. In the key of D, the negative of A7 is G-6, which then gets substituted up a minor third to get Bb-6.
As it turns out, negative dominants resolve the voice leading to minor I's as smoothly as "positive" dominants do to major I's.
This editing is top notch
Hey Ben-could you release the song on its own? Your arrangement is the best I’ve heard, and I’d love to follow along. Thanks!
Thanks for this, Ben!
awesome video
Wow. Love to see you apply this treatment to Lalo's piano solo from Dizzy at the French Riviera
So humble
ngl i cracked up on the first times you started cursing in the latter half, I got caught off guard
This video exudes a helluva lotta passion. I loved the textures of the synths you were using to exhibit the different progression cases. I hope you're not going anywhere anytime soon. :P
obrigado doutor
Bbm6 to Dm can be viewed as A7(b9/b13)/Bb or Eb9/Bb, the V7 and subV7.
Great video! I loved it
Can you make a lesson on how to play that piece? Its sound great.
I don't think these are the chords played in the original recording. They work fine as substitutions and probably make for more standard progressions, almost as if the original chords are the substitutions and these were the real ones. But I'd love an analysis of those, with all the extensions and diminished chords!
👍👍👍 that was awesome.
awesome!
Really nice and interesting video, greetings from Italy!
Even though this video went to fast for me, it’s very clear you’re trying your best to make quality content. Keep making videos like this ❤️❤️❤️
Just today my brother was telling me how Jobim managed to write the second most played song in the world with the melody starting on the 9th, and in fact not having the tonic until the 4th/5th measure of the song. Girl from Ipanema sounds so simple and yet it's so complex, like this one. :)
This is a beautiful song in every possible way, including lyrics. Vinicius de Moraes knew his way around the Portuguese language just like Tom Jobim knew music.
Loved this video! Very helpful! And the animations served it really well imo haha
I like to think about the Bbm6 as a subV or "another chord that shares the A7 tritone notes (C#/Db and G)".
More, more, mooooore!
Oh fuck this is my favorite song of all time-thank you!
great content.Greetings from Brazil!
5:51 it’s kinda like a minor version of Take the A train ¿¿
What a kind soul. Love your content, your band was slamming at Thank You Scientist at the Met as well!
I wish I understood what the R you are explaining in this video. I have been listening to your latest album(that I purchased & downloaded) I can’t think of a song with a better introduction than your song ‘I love you’.
I am a huge John frusciante fan; he made me want to play guitar 30 years ago, but your choices speak to me even more. Ta.
This is great. When does the next one come out?
Great video! It's interesting how you can always tell a non-Brazilian playing a Brazilian song by their rhythm
Thanks for the clip. I really like your choice of songs and am grateful for you bringing it to my attention. I may have to put it on that long list of tunes I am learning. Your voicings and movement sounded delicious. Around 11:14, where you are looking at the movement from F#-7 to F dim7 to E-7, I find myself thinking of a chord scales progression a friend showed me. It had the usual chords for every note in the scale and in-between those (the dissonant out of key root notes) this guitarist used a diminished chord so each of the twelve notes had a chord. Is there a name for that? Could that be another way of looking at this movement? I am curious about chordal scales and enjoy learning about more about how people look at chord movements from that perspective.
In my earlier comment...
I felt compelled to use the M roman numeral for the momentary and swiftly passing joy of being the slightly significant 1000's like. It wasn't a Major thing.
Gary Burton's vibraphone recording of this tune is really nice too, I highly recommend it.
Can we get a full instrumental version of the song?
brazilian tip: if you wanna go brazilian, use nylon strings
@@lachaineguitarededavid ye got it. but I mean that steel strings doesn't have the timbre of that kind of Brazilian music. You won't see Brazilians using steel for Bossa Nova or Samba
E de sincopar a levada :)
Owning up to mistakes and correcting them. +1
Adam Rafferty is the best 🎯! Thx for this content and for sharing your insights?
yeahhhh, Brazil here boyyy
Great video! Thank you man :D
We're all human! Love you Ben! Don't forget to stop at your local Ddim7 and PISS.
I love this song, great video, made me laugh, Thanks! Great job
at 6:10 i thought that it was more about the E7 changing into a E halfdim (especially because the earlier bass note emphasised the B) so that it could be a minor ii-v-1 back to D. its not terribly different and i’m certainly not the trained professional here, im more wondering am i wrong for thinking that or just thinking a little bit differently? thanks great vid though
As a brazilian I always think the way you north americans pronounce the words in portuguese is very cute haha
Did you do this video as a homage to João Gilberto? Did you know he passed away like a month ago?
Yes I knew that and it is indeed something I wanted to do to share his music to more people.
@@BenLevin thank you.
i really liked this!!! i know this'll help me a lot with my composition, thank you :>>
“That’s a fair amount of D”
Oh, god 😂