Amazing Triad Chord Progressions Where You Can Mix Jazz And Pop
Музыка
You can easily make a lot of beautiful and surprising chord progressions on the guitar, so I don't think there is a reason why most pop music is recycling the same chords over and over.
The Best Jazz Chords To Start With:
• 5 Basic Jazz Chord Exe...
Learn Functional Harmony For Jazz:
• How The Pros Think Abo...
Get the PDF on my website:
jenslarsen.nl/can-i-write-mor...
Get the PDF and GuitarPro files on Patreon:
www.patreon.com/posts/8346705...
🎸Check out my Online Course, The Jazz Guitar Roadmap: bit.ly/JazzGtRm
🔴 Subscribe for more free Jazz Guitar Lessons and Videos: bit.ly/JensLessons
☑️ Support me on Patreon: / jenslarsen
✅DOWNLOAD A FREE E-BOOK with 15 II Valt I licks!
Sign up for my newsletter:
jenslarsen.nl/sign-up-for-my-n...
▶️ Check out my latest video: goo.gl/G16gVx
🎸Check out my Online Course, The Jazz Guitar Roadmap: bit.ly/JazzGtRm
Content:
00:00 Boring Chord Progressions
01:37 Mixing Major and Minor
03:49 Making It Into Music
04:14 The Power Inversions
05:57 Why I use Spread Triads
07:38 Adding Melody to the chords
08:45 The Power of Extra Dominant Chords
10:37 Learning To Understand Harmony
10:48 Like the video? Check out my Patreon page!
My name is Jens Larsen, Danish Jazz Guitarist, and Educator. The videos on this channel will help you explore and enjoy Jazz. Some of it is how to play jazz guitar, but other videos are more on Music Theory like Jazz Chords or advice on how to practice and learn Jazz, on guitar or any other instrument.
The videos are mostly jazz guitar lessons, but also music theory, analysis of songs and videos on jazz guitars.
Edited by Luciano Poli - Business Inquiries: polivideoedit@gmail.com
Facebook: / jenslarsenytlessons
Twitter: / jensljazz
Instagram: / jenslarsenjazz
My Book: Modern Jazz Guitar Concepts: geni.us/Y69J4
My Gear:
www.amazon.com/shop/jenslarsen
Music Notation: www.guitar-pro.com/#ae113
Clip-on Tuner: geni.us/FbPGZg4
Great Safe Gigbag: geni.us/1aH94
SonoCore Strings: 13-53 geni.us/nU3NA3V
Powered Monitor: geni.us/YB8z3X
Headphones: geni.us/fGDhHl
Audio Interface: geni.us/qFIfT
Camera 1: geni.us/AlpjaA7siii
Lens 1: geni.us/Sigma2470
Lens 2: geni.us/GmM8
Video Lights: geni.us/wQ8jhSy
Video Lights: geni.us/MWtU
Пікірлер: 164
Jens, in a 10- minute video you just gave us YEARS of ideas to work with! ( as you always do!) Thank you!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was useful! Hope you don't get overworked 🙂
@georgeknightley8828
Жыл бұрын
@@JensLarsen 😄
@electorize
Жыл бұрын
Just what I wanted to say: He always does this 😂
@lawrenrich6419
Жыл бұрын
Agreed !
@nayarlopez8655
Жыл бұрын
Well put. Excellent lesson. Thanks, Jens!
I don't know, those major seven chords for Smells Like Teen Spirit sounded pretty good to me.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Well, that is up to the ears of the beholder, I guess 😁
The minor 5 is a great chord for writing Japanese fusion/citypop chord progressions as well
The more I watch these the more I am learning from your voicings. The guitar doesn’t have to fill in a massive “wall of sound” the whole time, especially in an ensemble. Sparse and accurate voicings with good tone leading can go a long way. Thank you again for sharing these videos.
Fantastic material. Another reason to love spread triads is that when you add a little overdrive to them, you can still make out the pitches which is not always the case with stacked triads. Thanks for the ideas!
”No rules, play minor instead of major” What to believe/trust anymore? The answer is your ears/what you hear within the context. If it sounds good, it is good. Theory and notation are desperately trying to picture/explain what we are hearing, not setting the rules for creating music. Thanx Jens again. You’re always on spot in the core.❤
Just starting my Jazz journey.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Go for it!
I'll definitely be rewatching and studying this one
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was useful! :)
Really good video, helpful music theory but simpler and without the complications that jazz brings and the principle is easier to understand
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
That is really great to hear Christian!
This has really opened up ways to create chord progressions Jens, thanks
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it, John!
This is really helpful for someone like me who may never transcend into the jazz world, but wants to make his non-jazz playing more creative harmonically.
What is your favorite Pop or Rock progression? I might go with Radiohead's Creep The Best Jazz Chords To Start With: kzread.info/dash/bejne/rHxo17OSl6fVpLA.html
@erikberg8352
Жыл бұрын
I found Opeth's Patterns in the Ivy to be a great example of your triad progression lesson here, and they are frequent users of the I-v chord progression you mentioned. I think you are on to something with the Scandinavian folk music connection--a lot of great Swedish bands from ABBA to Ghost credit the strong music education curriculum in public schools.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
@@erikberg8352 Opeth does indeed often have very nice and folk-inspired chord progressions. I am certainly a fan
I love the visual aids in your videos. super helpful having the chord diagrams and tabs fo everything you play. Thanks so much for the hard work. makes my life a lot easier
This is gold! Thank you so much for all the hard work you put into your channel.
This lesson is absolutely timed perfectly for my next step in my guitar journey! Thank you!
More vids like this please 🙏🏼
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
Very good video Jens. The spread triads remind me of Mick Goodrick’s sound. Can’t wait to wake up tomorrow and try some of these.
Expected a totally different, way less interesting video based on the thumbnail. Very cool approach to harmony and chord movement! Loved the joke "jazz harmonization" of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" at the start.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thanks 😁
Thanks for this video, Jens! I'm putting together a list of songs and messing around with a looper to get out there and possibly gig. I definitely needed to hear some of these ideas. Cheers!
Another great post, Jens. Very inspiring in terms of new things to try. One strong point of this presentation is that it is not prescriptive-- you know, you allow for finding things that just sound right without exactly knowing how they are justified in terms of theory, although that can be a helpful tool. I think we should be free to screw around and find intriguing melodies and then fill in the harmony that sounds appropriate.
This is brilliant. Some of these work well when you add open strings for added flavor.
This was really one of, if not the, best videos you’ve done.
That's a great useful and inspiring video as usual! 👍🔥Being subscribed for years to Jens' channel. You always can find something cool, interesting and inspiring here👍👍
This is really quite brilliant. Just demonstrating what a gifted and (equally important) what a creative musician Jens is. Generous too in his thinking that not music has to be jazz to be worthwhile. I despair at the lack of musical imagination in much popular music and here he Jens showing that simple need not mean cliche or mindless and that a brilliant musician can teach relatively basic material without being in the least patronising.
Jens, great lesson! That is very useful!
This is awesome Jens. I love the voice leading motifs.
@JensLarsen
10 ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad you like it 🙂
Phenomenal information and presentation! Thanks Jens this will be quite helpful in my work for a band am in. Cheers!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was useful 🙂
I always appreciate your open-handed sharing of knowledge you gained from years of study. It’s a gift to us when you frame it in sound theory yet make the ear the final arbiter. Thank you for your giving nature.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like the video and put it to use 🙂
"Turning all the chords in into 7sus4 and maj7...." 😂 Good one Jens!
Appreciate this way of looking at chords, especially when observing more simplistic music. Using different chords, inversions, and voicings automatically make music much more interesting. Cheers
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ron!
@RC32Smiths01
Жыл бұрын
@@JensLarsen My pleasure!
Once again, this is gold ! Thank you so much !
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful 🙂
This is ABSOLUTE GOLD
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it waws useful! 🙂
, thank you so much ! I always find your content efficient, useful and inspiring !
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear that 🙂
This fits so well with my current focus on voice-led cycles. Thanks!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
That's great 🙂
The progression you opened with sounds a lot like Silvio Rodriguez' Rabo de Nube, cuban singer songwriter, very popular in all latinamerica, not exactly pop music but rather a genre known as Nueva trova (something like new folk?), he's a very proficient guitar player. Thanks for helping us understand! As usual mind blowing eye opening video!
You are a great help to old Jim's playing. Thank you for what you do. My version of "California Blues" will never be the same. Ha!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
That is really good to hear!
You are brilliant, Jens.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙂
I think that's a resounding yes 🤣
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
I appreciate the confidence 😂 (no pressure....)
@binface9
Жыл бұрын
@Jens Larsen you're brilliant and Sheeran and the O'Connell siblings have set the bar rather low
Thank you, Jens! This is lightning in a bottle. And why I am a regular viewer of your channel even though I don't aspire to jazz. I immediately hear music that is fresh and that I want to be able to play or create, and leave understanding how and why. I just can't get this anywhere else. (Also, I loved hearing you say, "I don't like too many notes," after your hilarious intro to the Paul Davids solo challenge.) BTW, how did I never hear of Traeben?? Checking it out now.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙂 Glad you like the videos
This is a little different from your usual videos. Very cool.
Please more of this!
Spread triads are pretty cool 😎
Hello from Cape Cod. So many ideas to explore here. Fabulous!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Great! Go for it! 😁
I really enjoyed this video! I will be adding borrowed minor chords to my projects immediately. I particularly liked the re-imagined Nirvana with sevenths and suspensions. Nice touch!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
Really interesting idea for a video, haven't seen anything quite like how it's presented here
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Frank
Great lesson!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙂
Amazing video. Thank you Jens!!!
@JensLarsen
8 ай бұрын
Glad you like it 🙂
Never used these spread voicings, but it sounds very cool, that you always have that major/minor 6th on the top!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Yes, they are really beautiful!
There are a number of great things that can be done from 3 Note Spread Chord Voicings (as demonstrated in this video). You can imagine the three parts to be 'Three Singers' (as in Bass, Tenor and Alto). These 'Three Singers / Voices' move melodically to their 'Counterparts' in the next chord. Instead of a chords just being 'grips' that you strum / pick, they become more interesting harmonically (which you can hear better because of the spacing) and melodically. As Jens demonstrates, there is always more than one way to do things in Music as applied to the Guitar - that's for sure !
Great job on this one man 👍you are right about this, we dont always have to stick to theory "rules" . It's good to know them though 😏
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely!
Yeah I should I asked you how do you learn jazz when you’re blind I can only hear it very well I can’t see it. I hear all the notes like it’s a part of my skin. Every sound runs to my body like I know where I’m going you’re amazing. I hear a lot from you. Explains a lot of theory. Thank you so much.
Beautiful, Jens! Greetings from Berlin! J.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
Awesome video, love spread triads. Does anyone have tips on making secondary dominants less abrubt. Is it about inversions and or rhythmic placement? Thanks 😊
Brilliant... thank you
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
Sounds great and this will be fun to practice. Music would get so much more interesting and rich if todays artists started incorporating some of these concepts.
Nice one!
Mahalo for the great videos! Have you looked at the chord progressions in the 1st movement of the piece, "Five Bagatelles For Guitar", by William Walton? Julian Bream rocks these , "5 Bagatelles: No. 1, Allegro". I love those gorgeous progressions & voicings and they might make for a good video discussion. Another very different, more esoteric piece, (chordally and melodically), is "Drei Tentos" by Henze, (Bream performance).
Well done! Again 👍😎
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
At last, you've covered something I already do, albeit in a more haphazard way than this, and with less reliable results! The only problem is trying to remember what I did ...
Nice stuff, Jens.! I think the more exotic sounds are mostly appreciated by musicians. People who listen to mostly pop music probably wouldn't understand anything but straight, diatonic sounds. I admit I like some current pop. I like Adele and, of course, Lady Gaga, as both can sing very well. There are some good and decent pop stars out there. Good presentation. It reminds me I haven't done any creative exploring as you presented in a long time. Perhaps you or I will write the next number one pop song and become filthy rich! Ha-ha!
Excellent, merci beaucoup.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
Very nice
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Johan 🙂
Very nice!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it 🙂
@dexterleeledford2347
Жыл бұрын
@@JensLarsen Right away I could hear these chords in neo-soul type ideas. thanks!
Would love to see you digest some Tame Impala songs. Some of them have extremely interesting chord progressions, that’s on first glance seem to only gel together via Kevin Parker’s amazing vocal melodies. Apocalypse Dreams’ comes to mind
Very nice! To appeal even more you should share that open triads are essential part of Pat Metheny sound and you are done! 😀
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Well, I already talked about that a few times in the past so....
@stefanobonoli8783
Жыл бұрын
@@JensLarsen absolutely!
Thanks!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much Sam! I really appreciate that you want to support the channel!
The Smells Like Teen Spirit jazzy progression legit made me laugh
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
👍😁🙏
I think you just gave a very Beatles like approach to songwriting 🤩 as we know they were some of the most brilliant songwriters of all time! I would love to see pop shift back to this at some point keeping some of the electronic stuff that’s popular in modern music but still making more interesting chord choices
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it 🙂
nice!!
I wish I had been told this 5 years ago!
Grate lesson! I have learned a lot. One suggestion - could it be that 'Clock' of Coldplay (3:05 in the clip) is actually in a scale of Ab (even maybe if it never goes there..) and then the flow goes - iv Eb -> ii Bbm x 2 -> vi Fm (Deceptive cadence). If you try to end the tune with the suggested tonic Eb it never sounds 'home' as tonic should sounds. Thanks!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Ok, I hear it in Eb, but you can easily find other examples of songs that are playing around with being mixolydian, especially in Rock. Just listen to AC/DC
Muchas gracias!!!
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it!
2:51 That sounds like Thanks Nobuo by Periphery.
7:24 you use a Db in the second measure ;where is that coming from (other than the Neapolitan 6)?
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
It comes from voice-leading. I am talking about not being limited by rules in that section and the next one as well.
Hello guitarist 🍀🙏🎶🎼🎵❤️👌🎸✌️
Yes, yes, yes!
The short clip of a jazzed up Kurt Cobain song is a pretty good illustration of how adding jazz chords to pop songs is not always a good idea
Wow. Where can I study this without going completely jazz?
Jens you should make a video of you playing metal haha
this sounds like tonic sub, modal sub but we will see what is Jens up to 😊
Do I need to subscribe to the newsletter to get this lesson's PDF?
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Yes 🙂
Check the Glasper version of smells like teen spirit.
I was wondering if it exists a "Triads Book" as it exists many "Chords Books"
Yes,easy
Thanks for your hard work - spreading information for lazy ass guitarists))))
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like the videos 🙂
Key of C, B half, 😉
Opeth - Isolation Years !
Next month's Spotify top 10 songs will have contain 11 songs witn plagal cadence
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
That could be fun 😁
Kurt cobain himself hated that song glad you fixed it
Ed's "Thinking Out Loud" uses the same chord progression as Marvin (actually Townsend's) "Let's Get It On," probably because he's incapable of coming up with his own chord progressions. But, there's a LOT more to it than the chord progression, regarding the copyright lawsuit. He's just unoriginal. Those very same chords are used all over the place and don't sound like LGO. Much earlier, "Georgie Girl." And the University of Michigan's "Let's Go Blue" pep rally break song (probably scores of marching bands use this). And Zawinul's "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy." None of those sound like each other....
What I admire most about SpongeBob Squarepants is his ability -from a severed arm, to grow an arm back.
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
That is indeed impressive!
Is it possible? Yes, it’s called tone leading and most guitarists can’t be arsed.
👍👋😍
@JensLarsen
9 ай бұрын
🙏🙂
TED GREENE VIBES
Du godt nok sindsyg til det her
@JensLarsen
7 ай бұрын
Tusind tak!
That's lydian isn't it?
hah hah Smells like teen spirit, the main riff, is all sus4 chords. Cobain fretted it, whether or not he actually sounded the 4th constantly.
Of course you can write great pop music, even just using diatonic triads. Composers knew this hundreds of years ago, long before pop music as we know it was even invented! Great pop composers of the 70s, like Benny Anderson, knew this and took lots of inspiration from old Johan Sebastian and Wolfgang Amadeus. The reason pop music today lacks musical interest is not to do with lack of musical possibilities. It's because pop music is increasingly becoming disposable, a mass market commodity always appealing to the lowest common denominator. I'm sad to say that your video is not going to save pop music, even if it contains great musical advice.
@CellZealot
Жыл бұрын
It's just a hook to get more engagement...I think Jens is well aware that his target audience is Jazz lovers with generally more sophisticated tastes in music. That shouldn't stop him from trying...and I am sure won't...
This video isn’t really George Benson
@JensLarsen
Жыл бұрын
No, he is mostly a real person and not a digital online video
Pop music, please don't go there.