MARK, some blues songs start on the IV instead of the I chord, which I'm not sure what its called when you start on the IV chord but there must be a musical theory term for this. SRV instead of using the V7 dominant or V augmented, SRV uses a Db chord, which is not a 13 chord but something other. The song is in the key of E major, so the IV chord is A major, V7 is B dominant, but the Db is a flatted bVII chord. I'm not sure what this Db chord because it has added the b5 note. Watch at time 1:44 and time 3:07 th-cam.com/video/BMK1g4rHrWY/w-d-xo.html
Hi Wayne. To my knowledge, there's not a widely-accepted term for them. You could try Google as I just did to see if there's an obvious term. You may find a term you like. In that piece cited (at the 1:44 mark), the Db (C# rather) shouldn't be viewed as a bbVII for E, it makes much more sense to think of it as the 3rd of A. Stevie is, to my ears, playing an A dominant type of move there.
@@MarkZabel the song is in the key of E , not in the key of A. I'm guessing you can play the 3rd of the IV chord which would be C# dominant 7, but it looks like SRV is adding in the b5 note to the C# chord
@@MarkZabel That bVII chord of E or A dominant13 ( rootless ) chord is a Blues chord to use Rootless dominant chords with added "in between notes" the way SRV was using all those in between notes. Is you listen to a lot of Live Jimmy Page 1990 reunion era with Robert Plant tour he uses a lot of "in between notes" as fillers, which SLASH uses these "in between notes also. Try to make a lesson about in-between notes.
Not at all. You might be a degenerate for other reasons, but not for claiming Freddie as your favorite King. Not saying you’re a degenerate. I’m not here to judge.
another very useful lesson, I appreciate the short and to the point lessons. Thanks
Glad you like them that way. I try hard to keep them short, while still teaching concepts.
Ok...that's interesting 👍
I did NOT see that A7 coming....tricky tricky tricky 😀
Yes, very tricky. Add that tension and then release. Very dramatic.
Awesome Mark! Love this!! Thank you for teaching this!! 💖🥰
My pleasure! Glad you like it.
Thanks!
Thank you so much! I appreciate it!
Really nice and does certainly makes it more interesting! Liked the aug chord too (most europeans would say + chord I think)
Thanks. Yes, it's an "Augmented 5th", so the notes are 1, 3, #5 (A, C#, E# for an Aaug or A+ chord). Very spicy!
I didn't know you could do this. I mean, I knew you could but now I know what to call it! Do you have any other videos on voice leadings?
I'm sure I do, though maybe not specifically about it. It's a concept I use all the time. Should do a video more explicitly about it.
Thank you Mark
My pleasure!
What a fantastic video have a wonderful day Mark also Monday was a friend birthday ❤😊 December 2 also my voice is back ❤😊
Thanks!
MARK, some blues songs start on the IV instead of the I chord, which I'm not sure what its called when you start on the IV chord but there must be a musical theory term for this. SRV instead of using the V7 dominant or V augmented, SRV uses a Db chord, which is not a 13 chord but something other. The song is in the key of E major, so the IV chord is A major, V7 is B dominant, but the Db is a flatted bVII chord. I'm not sure what this Db chord because it has added the b5 note. Watch at time 1:44 and time 3:07 th-cam.com/video/BMK1g4rHrWY/w-d-xo.html
Hi Wayne. To my knowledge, there's not a widely-accepted term for them. You could try Google as I just did to see if there's an obvious term. You may find a term you like.
In that piece cited (at the 1:44 mark), the Db (C# rather) shouldn't be viewed as a bbVII for E, it makes much more sense to think of it as the 3rd of A. Stevie is, to my ears, playing an A dominant type of move there.
@@MarkZabel the song is in the key of E , not in the key of A. I'm guessing you can play the 3rd of the IV chord which would be C# dominant 7, but it looks like SRV is adding in the b5 note to the C# chord
@@MarkZabel That bVII chord of E or A dominant13 ( rootless ) chord is a Blues chord to use Rootless dominant chords with added "in between notes" the way SRV was using all those in between notes. Is you listen to a lot of Live Jimmy Page 1990 reunion era with Robert Plant tour he uses a lot of "in between notes" as fillers, which SLASH uses these "in between notes also. Try to make a lesson about in-between notes.
#10, fans sleeping, been posted forc6 minutes
Major and/or Minor over a Major chord progression = 😃
Major scale over Minor progression? Not so great 😕
Am I a degenerate for claiming Freddie as my favorite King?
No way. Freddie was incredible. Great writer too. Influenced Clapton heavily.
Not at all. You might be a degenerate for other reasons, but not for claiming Freddie as your favorite King. Not saying you’re a degenerate. I’m not here to judge.
Did Freddie play Flying Vs Or was that Albert?
@ Albert played the V. Freddie played a hollow body of some sort.
@@mondoseguendo6113 🤔😁