Five stars from me, Jonny! This sounds great and is a really great lesson for gospel and stride, but also for the use of the black keys which many people tend to avoid. They stick to the white keys because they think it's easier, but actually that's just a mental block. I find it also excellent for building left hand strength and control, and it could easily be played in all 12 keys as a fundamental exercise.
I call that a "closed triad". In this case it's in first inversion. C-Eb-Ab-C. Which I find are good to practice just by themselves. (let us know If you have another name for this structure) So I'll go through the 12 major triads, playing root, 1st inv, 2nd inv, root on each. Chopin made great use of this in his famous Prelude in C Minor (which you might recognize as the piece Barry Manilow borrowed for his Could it be Magic).
lol, I was thinking the same thing. This is what I think of when I think of Gospel. th-cam.com/video/at2p26fiL5E/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/pvQ24v4EffY/w-d-xo.html
@@etiennedelaunois1737 If I follow, I’m not sure that I would agree. Growing up in Gospel music, there is very much a difference between a hymn and southern gospel or black gospel. Can a hymn be a gospel song or a gospel song be a hymn? Yes, but those are often exceptions rather than the rule. Hymns are generally strophic and maintain a standard and simplicity to them whereas gospel tunes often depart from the general classical structure of hymns. While gospel songs may often use the standard I vi V IV progression (or a variation), the sample given in the video does not have a gospel groove but is more closely related to something between mainstream blues and country. Toy Story’s ‘You’ve Got a Friend in Me’ as well as classics like ‘Georgia on My Mind’, ‘Stand By Me’, and ‘Sitting on the Dock of the Bay’ follow closer suit to the video that say a classic by the Kingsmen, the Cathedrals, the Speer Family, Kirk Franklin, Andre Crouch, or Jesse Dixon.
Great teacher, Jonny, thanks!
Awesome! That is fun!!
"You've got a friend in me..."
🎉🎉🎉Thanks🙏🙏🙏
🇧🇷 This is great, Jonny! :'m trying over and over; I know that I'll arrive there! Thank you for the poust!
Thanks. So useful lesson
Love the details in your explanations! Well done! Cheers!
That's what professional looks like
Five stars from me, Jonny! This sounds great and is a really great lesson for gospel and stride, but also for the use of the black keys which many people tend to avoid. They stick to the white keys because they think it's easier, but actually that's just a mental block. I find it also excellent for building left hand strength and control, and it could easily be played in all 12 keys as a fundamental exercise.
Thanx, Maestro 🌹🌹🌹
Jonny instruction are always a terrific addition to my repertoire 👍💯
Oh, THAT'S how it's done!!!!! Thank Jonny ☺️
Awesome!
Good teaching
I call that a "closed triad". In this case it's in first inversion. C-Eb-Ab-C. Which I find are good to practice just by themselves. (let us know If you have another name for this structure) So I'll go through the 12 major triads, playing root, 1st inv, 2nd inv, root on each. Chopin made great use of this in his famous Prelude in C Minor (which you might recognize as the piece Barry Manilow borrowed for his Could it be Magic).
Love it!
more more gospel, blessings from mexico
Hi Jonny, would you please make a video about latin gospel?
Superstar
Sounds great, but I don't know if I would call it gospel - black gospel or southern.
lol, I was thinking the same thing. This is what I think of when I think of Gospel.
th-cam.com/video/at2p26fiL5E/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/pvQ24v4EffY/w-d-xo.html
It is because of the chords progression. It is clearly the same functions of hymn to freedom for example, which definitely a gospel song.
@@etiennedelaunois1737 If I follow, I’m not sure that I would agree. Growing up in Gospel music, there is very much a difference between a hymn and southern gospel or black gospel. Can a hymn be a gospel song or a gospel song be a hymn? Yes, but those are often exceptions rather than the rule. Hymns are generally strophic and maintain a standard and simplicity to them whereas gospel tunes often depart from the general classical structure of hymns.
While gospel songs may often use the standard I vi V IV progression (or a variation), the sample given in the video does not have a gospel groove but is more closely related to something between mainstream blues and country. Toy Story’s ‘You’ve Got a Friend in Me’ as well as classics like ‘Georgia on My Mind’, ‘Stand By Me’, and ‘Sitting on the Dock of the Bay’ follow closer suit to the video that say a classic by the Kingsmen, the Cathedrals, the Speer Family, Kirk Franklin, Andre Crouch, or Jesse Dixon.
@@etiennedelaunois1737 Though I now realize hymn of freedom is probably a song and not a description.
jonny may you made a mistake 3:08 that is c not D😂😂
first one😂
first one😂
Nice