Music Theory for Songwriting in 30 Minutes! (Xmas Sale)
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In todays episode I will show you how to use Music Theory tips for improving your songwriting.
📚 XMAS SALE -- 40% OFF The Beato Book 4.0 - Use Coupon Code: XMAS - Get It Here: ⇢ rickbeato.com/
👂XMAS SALE - 40% OFF The Beato Ear Training Program - Use Code XMAS ⇢ beatoeartraining.com/
Пікірлер: 819
Rick, write a simple song that is missing most of your rules. Show us how you analyze, then apply some of your rules, slowly, step by step, showing how they make it better. Could be a whole training course!
@MacedonianGrace
3 жыл бұрын
Huh you buy the book
@ayobamidele
3 жыл бұрын
Great idea
@davefiano4172
3 жыл бұрын
YES
@daniellebrogden
3 жыл бұрын
Great idea
@ayobamidele
3 жыл бұрын
@@daniellebrogden For sure
Can someone please give this man an award for being so sharing, caring and lovely?...Rick, your service to us music types is unreal...i hope you get some recognition for all of your hard work x
@theodorewilcoxen2532
2 жыл бұрын
Yes yes yes
@theodorewilcoxen2532
2 жыл бұрын
Rick you have helped ME change my musical life more than any other individual... PERIOD. Thank you SIR!!!!
Best lesson ever: Took one of my crap melodies and improved it big time!
@Better_Call_Raul
3 жыл бұрын
Post how you changed it.
@alessiosandro123
3 жыл бұрын
XD
@Neptunade
3 жыл бұрын
Nice!!
@BajoCLF
2 жыл бұрын
Major achievement, man!
@andreamarielifestyle
10 ай бұрын
Awesome!
Flashback 1984 ... my Berklee songwriting teacher having me transcribe the #1 songs on the charts...and answer 20 questions about each song. You just summed up in 30 minutes, 80% of what I learned over 3 months of that process. Rick, I hope people realize and appreciate what a freakin' gold mine of knowledge you're sharing.
@DonyaLane
3 жыл бұрын
@devi dasa, I'm wondering if you and I ever crossed paths at Berklee. I was also in the pop songwriting class the year prior (I double checked, and all the songs I analyzed were on the '83 charts). Was that with John Aldrich or Craig Najjar? I took the class with John and studied privately with Craig.
@theodorewilcoxen2532
2 жыл бұрын
Some of us are!! Lolz. Rock on jazz on
@tanvarma4169
2 жыл бұрын
yeah but figuring out these items by spending the time and effort is also worth it. hard to apply cocnetps from a lecture without any practical experiements
There needs to be a “Beato Book For Dummies” lol.
@whatabouttheearth
3 жыл бұрын
😄 yeah, tha dudes damn good
@whatabouttheearth
3 жыл бұрын
@@someoneonyoutube1993 Beato will be enshrined as a great diety presiding with his twin brother and sister upon their birthplace, the great Mount Cynthus.
@bazgolin1036
3 жыл бұрын
That was one of the most informative and concise 31m02s I’ve ever spent on KZread (or anywhere else for that matter)! 🙏
@davefiano4172
3 жыл бұрын
My comment was a non-Sequiter btw. I bought the BB. It’s just over my head and the others I’ve shared it with.
@johnharvey4448
3 жыл бұрын
Definitely. I'd buy it.
When writing a melody, sing it instead of figuring it out on an instrument. That way, unless you have perfect pitch (or great relative pitch like Rick), you will focus on what sounds good. My hunch is most of the songs we love were written by the composer working out the melody with his/her voice while accompanying themselves on guitar or piano.
@ianbeaupre5838
3 жыл бұрын
Agreed, I more or less write all the heavy riffs for my band and even I find myself singing out chords and riffs before trying to figure them out on the guitar... I’m sure the stuff I’m singing sounds nothing like the actual part (because I am not a great vocalist) but it always somehow helps me translate the riff in my head to real life
@au5tinic38
2 жыл бұрын
For real! I actually realized that recently. It seems when I wrote melodies they don’t work well together cause I was sticking them together instead of singing off of each melody into the next section to see how it sounds. Very nice
@agl9591
4 ай бұрын
Check out the test/demo version of Violent Crimes by Kanye West for a perspective on how this works
This is like a "What Makes Most Great Songs Great" video.
Hey Rick - 64 year old who used to play in a serious garage band. I stopped playing 30 years ago but picked up an acoustic a few months ago. I just want to play pretty things, and I don't want a lot of influences anymore. Your videos about chords and scales have been a huge help to me. Thank you and God bless you!
Im in bed with a high fever and a Covid-19 positive test watching this. Might as well use the next weeks wisely and immerse myself in quality Biato tutorials!
@jessiehermit9503
3 жыл бұрын
I hope you get better.
@outernational
3 жыл бұрын
rest well and recover!
@music-ti7fu
3 жыл бұрын
That’s awful I’m so sorry to hear that :( I pray in Jesus’ name that you be completely healed right now ❤️
@anthonydalecy6980
3 жыл бұрын
Find wim Hof breathing method.......
@sweetangel6630
3 жыл бұрын
I hope you feel better!!! Take lots of vitamin C and D!
After watching this I went through a few of my tunes and spotted some places where I was using the root in the melody. Funny cause I always felt a little less than excited about those spots in the songs but didn’t know exactly why. You’re a treasure, Rick. Thank you.
Great tips, Rick! I'd use these maybe to review a melody that doesn't sound good enough when writing a song, but maybe not from the start, because inspiration sometimes just strikes you and the feeling is right, even though is not perfect theory-wise. A really important part of songwriting to me is to develop a taste, an ear to recognize what you like, what works for the music you make. Internalizing these principles and applying them by ear, by using your musical taste, to me just sounds like a much better way to use them than starting with a blank page and trying to write "perfectly", just by theory. Feeling is the most important part of music, in my opinion.
I was do blessed that my son gave me THE BEATO BOOK for my b-day. I spent 3 years in a top college program and know a good amount of theory and application. I have had great teachers in my 40 years playing. What you are giving to us all is more valuable than I think people understand. You are a true blessing my friend. I hope to meet you one day. Peace and many more blessings my friend 🙏
I can't understand how or why 83 people give this a thumbs down Rick!! It's FREE, it's educational, informative, well presented, and extremely helpful. Keep on doing what you do, and I wish you and your family a healthy, happy, prosperous new year in 2021 from Ireland.
Thanks Rick, there is a growing trend with me, I listen to your videos, get inspired and compose music. Don’t take everything word for word, but as a kick starter, or even to just get into a good mood. Hey what ever works. By the way bought your Beato Book, what a gem. So far found it best to read it with a piano keyboard plugged in to try things out. Many thanks.
I just got your book!! I had... let's call it an "event" in my life that made money tight, but I finally got enough to buy it! Your Christmas sale really helped! Thank you! I am so excited for this!!
Thanks Rick! Wow! You never cease to amaze. I have loved Beatle songs all my life and now I actually know Why. Love it! Please stay safe during the holidays.👊🏼
Thanks, Rick. Happy holidays to you and your family!
seriously grateful for your dedication to educating. thank you so much for sharing what you've learned
This changed my composition drastically, now it has more movement and it feels more like a song! Thank you Rick! ❤️
Rick, you're the best! Thanks for all you do and happy holidays!
I love half step bends and releases on the natural 6th while playing in the dorian/blues rock sound. Also the ninth. Magic intervals indeed
One of the best teaching videos I've ever seen on music or any other subject. Even a slow minded strummer such as myself can start to see some of the light through it!
Oh, man, the value packed into this FREE lesson! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
oh man Rick, that was one of my favourite videos you've ever made. Thanks! Such great stuff!! :)
That static versus moving comment for melody, blew my mind. Thanks Rick!
Please more like this in depth. I've been lookin for this type of info forever
I've watched so many of Rick's videos and im still able to learn so much. Very grateful. I'd love to see a more formal video with your top 10 songwriting rules.
You know Rick, I’ve been watching your videos for a couple of years now. I mainly watch them because of your enthousiasm for music in general, and rock and roll in particular. But honestly, every time you spoke about music theory it was like you were speaking alien man! Another tongue completely. This year, global pandemic obliging, I tried to pick up home accessible hobbies. So, at 50, for the first time of my life I picked up a guitar and seriously started learning how to play it. With it, I started to learn how to put those melodies I hear in my head in the morning on paper. Today, I think I’m finally starting to understand your language. Not entirely, not in depth, but along the outskirts. All of this is to say, very inarticulate, thank you and I’m glad I stuck listening to your videos. Keep up the good work!
way above my head. Thank you for posting Rick!
Composition Class that revolves around Day in the Life. I love this so much Rick. Thanks thanks and thanks again
Fantastic episode, Rick! Love the breakdown here...
Brother, I just want to say I’m truly grateful that you are able to articulate your knowledge the way you do. I am relatively untrained as a guitar player other than a couple of jazz courses i took. I purchased your ear training course and the music theory book. I’m looking forward to see where my understanding of music is and how it progresses with these tools over the next year.
Great video Rick. This is the one I've been waiting for in didn't even know it. I have your book but I probably won't be able to delve deeply into it till I retire soon. Givers get rewarded.
That flat 6 in Eleanor Rigby is because it has harmonic implications: it "tonicizes" a C chord to root E: E-G-B-C (EGC). The regular 6 is a "scale" note. Thank you "Mister Ear" Rick Beato!
@koho
3 жыл бұрын
I hear it as the top note in a "passing" triplet in a descending figure.
@williamrobinson7061
3 жыл бұрын
@@koho In other words, you hear it melodically. I do too, but I also hear its harmonic implication.
I love these kinds of videos. This stuff really helps me with my own songwriting. Thanks, Rick!
Thanks for the XMAS promo Rick. I just picked up the Beato Book and the Ear Training Program. Been looking to pull the trigger for awhile! Here we go!
This is the best video I ever saw for actually applying chords the notes.
I learned more in this video than I have in the past year trying to write good songs. Thanks Rick, Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!
Thanks for doing videos like this Rick! I have so much to learn but I have my guitar, pad and paper out and the Beato book while I rewind and figure out what you’re talking about. It takes me a while but I’m starting to get it. Good stuff!
You deserve much more then 30k view in 17 hours... I agree that from Romania, Europe. You are the best couch for applying music theory on the guitar and other instruments. God bless you good man. I wish you wealthness, healthness and happiness.. You deserve all of that.
Thank you Rick and Merry Christmas to you and your family.
This is really gold Rick, thank you so much!
Thank you for helping bring music back into my heart
Hi Rick, I just want to thank you for what you are doing here on KZread! I have your Beato book, and I am loving it, and I have purchased the ear training as well recently. Thanks for everything! 👍 You are a cool guy! Love from Europe!
you are the man!!!!!!! I've done the 6th on a major chord, I've changed to a 7th and it improved big time!!!!
Hey Rick- was actually writing and producing a new tune this morning and ran across this video. Great stuff! I was stuck on a melody part and this jogged my brain loose! Thanks!
I loved this episode! This was news you can use on so many levels! Thank You Rick!
great lessons here !!! i've written about 30 songs by ears only and now i have to hunt those 6th notes and learn music theories ! your method of teaching is simply inspiring.
You never stop surprising me with your knowledge.
Thank you so much for posting. This inspires me to take my songwriting to a new level.
Hey Rick, it would be cool you hear to talk about headphones and audio reference gear. I LOVE the music theory content. But being that you talk about guitar tone and you’re a producer. I would really like to hear your opinions/experience with reference speakers/headphones and audio quality in general for consumers and professionals.
@sukhchainsingh1776
3 жыл бұрын
great idea bro
@USAMehdi
3 жыл бұрын
Good idea. So far I've been reading the specs on headphones etc. Usually only look at their Range like from 20 to 20,000 Hz. I prefer lower than 20 Hertz and higher than 20 kHz (like 16 to 22K Hz ) . But not sure if paying 80+ dollars for pair of Apple headphone is the right thing?
@guppybill
3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Timely topic for me too.
@purposeinpresence4494
3 жыл бұрын
@@USAMehdi They are ok, certainly better than a lot of what you get elsewhere for the price, Bluetooth headphones and high-end headphones have been two separate worlds, but they are starting to converge.
@Zappappappappa
3 жыл бұрын
@@purposeinpresence4494 I believe Sony is the best bang for your buck if you don't want to spend over $150 and they have all of their "professional" grade bluetooth headphones on sale at the moment and I've recently purchased a pair that is normally $200 on sale for $88 (all of their headphones were on sale for over 50% off.) I've always preferred wired headphones but the 710N model which is the one I bought are extremely high quality for the price and their Hz range puts them into professional grade in my opinion. The battery life lasting for 35 hours is extremely convenient, they also included a cable in case you want to use it with bluetooth off or if the battery is dead to the wireless function which is something these bluetooth headphones haven't been including which is a huge upgrade.
Thank you, Mr. Beato. Much respect to you. You'll end up makin' musicians out of us old hacks yet!
Thank you for mentioning Paul Simon. One of my favorite songwriters that I haven't heard you discuss much on the channel. And, perhaps the one that most got me interested in why music theory matters.
This is gold. I’m going to binge watch all of your videos tomorrow
Discovered your channel the other day... and oh my word!! Where have you been all my life!! Thanks for the great content! Please keep it coming!
Thank you Mr Beato. It's really pleasing to watch you teaching things with passion and energy. 😁
Small-but-important point for your producers: "We can't hear the 'echo' that you were talking about." (By the time it makes it it through to us, such nuances have been utterly compressed-away.) But, it is MUCH easier for us to see intervals on the keyboard-display, especially if we don't play guitar. We only care about the material, not how good it sounds. [WHICH LEADS ME TO ...] P.S.: An idea for a new video ... "the 'jargon' of music theory." Things like, "tension note," "borrowed chord," even a refresher of what exactly we mean when we refer to "11ths" when there are only 8 (7?) notes in the octave. All of these technical terms, while easily explained, are a potential obstacle to understanding - yet, while conducting a video of course you can't necessarily "stop and explain" without entirely disrupting your narrative. Hence the notion of new episode(s), which you can thereafter refer-to and encourage folks to bookmark. The "trade vernacular" of any "trade" necessarily includes "certain terms," the implicit understanding of which are essential to "fluid understanding" of the presentation or the text. But, if you don't know them already, any of them can throw you entirely off the track. There might only be a few dozen terms (if that many) which would qualify in a discussion of music-theory topics. The replies to "your first pitch" would very quickly point out the rest of them, as seen by your actual worldwide audience. HTH!
@The_Accuser
3 жыл бұрын
A nice thumb rule is: 'SUBTRACT SEVEN!' 9 - 7 = 2 11 - 7 = 4 13 - 7 = 6 The idea is that the basic notes of a chord are in the first octave. The fancy stuff is an octave higher.
Thanks Mr. Beato Christmas came early with this lesson. Exactly what I was looking for.
Happy Holidays brotha! Thx for all the great content this year thru the pandemic. You are the man.. Rock on Rick!!
Rick woke up today and watched this with a fresh brain and a nice sunrise … Thank you so much for your work baller 🏀
This is some of the best advice on this channel, and that's saying something
Thanks Rick. Merry Christmas.
Excellent lecture Rick. I think you just kicked my songwriting forward a decade.
This changes fundamentally what I knew about music so far. It makes a lot of sense. Hardest part would be to find singer that can sing extensions in a chord progressions as most people go for 5th or the Root of the chord. The way I see this is, record melody/singer with basic chord progression, than go back and rearrange chord notes and bass guitar.
As far as the 6th is concerned, they are actually very useful as passing tones in old blues, boogie-woogie and swing. Use them deliberately in the right genre and they fit like they belong.
This is mega! Thanks a lot! I cant wait to check this out! THANKS!!!!
Dude! Thanks for inspiring me to take the plunge. I am now the proud owner of my very own Yamaha PSR EW300! I just love playing the hell out of that thing! I haven't even discovered everything it can do and I'm totally in love with it. So far my favorite is the default organ voice. Animals, ELP, Van der Graaf. I'm thinking of all that stuff when I play. And all of these music theory videos and The Beato Book (I got already) and the Ear Training (got that too) I'm going to enjoy all of that soooo much more now that I got my own keyboard to apply that to. So thanks again. Greatest toy I EVER got for Christmas for damn sure! lol
Thank you mr. Beato...There is a wealth of information on this channel. Caught on a little late to this channel. I will be sure to pick up one of those theory books 📚. Have a happy holiday 👍🏼🙂.
Very useful tips for Melody writing. My ears have always told me what to avoid and what doesn't sound good, but now I understand why that is and the theory behind these rules. Thanks Rick!
@pattistilwell7424
3 жыл бұрын
Hello Bruce, how are you doing. I'm Patti from Long Beach California, just looking for new friend and i saw your pic here. Merry Christmas to you.
Great lesson Rick. Learned a lot man. Cheery happy holidays to ya!
Thank you so much Rick, merry Xmas
Thank you! Best channel on KZread. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
This has helped me a lot with writing my baselines. At first I was confused about not using 6ths over major chords. But than I realized Beato is talking about the 6th of the chords not the key. The 6th of key sounds great over the 4 chord it is the third of the 4 chord in Ionian.
The intervals between voices and the rythm modes on it also makes a very interesting theme there ... Merry Christmas and happy new year ...
Excellent set of "rules", really well presented. Enjoyed watching this video! Would love to see Rick's take on the Coltrane Circle at some point. Hats off for making the book available with a "solo deal", definitely had me jumping to buy such a great book! Thanks Rick Beato!
Great stuff as usual Rick, happy holidays!
This is gold. Thanks for sharing as always.
Thanks Rick. You are full of knowledge. Appreciate you sharing.
Awesome lesson! This really expands my understanding of melody writing, why I love certain melodies and how to maximise my own melodies. Much appreciated Mr. B
Rick you are awesome! Thank you for this vid i think i learned a thing or two here. Merry Christmas and happy holidays!
What would we do without you Rick. Merry Xmas to you and your Fam Bam.
Great video Rick! This is great information. I'm gonna get started building a song.
I love your stuff Rick. I love what you give us all. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I listened to this, and there's a lot that is technically correct and you know it more than I do. For certain types of songs, avoiding root in chords (inversions) is good, others obviously not. When you got to the part with no 6ths on a major chord, I started to convulse a little. You went on. You're not necessarily wrong. I thought. I thought some more. I thought about rules and how composers think. I'm pretty sure this stuff is useful, unless you let it get in the way of actually creating something. When you create, initially you shouldn't be throwing up a bunch of hurdles (list of rules) on the road to creation. It's a uniquely awesome ability to either hear what's wrong and fix it from the start, or for the rest of us mortals to fix stuff later as we move along with a composition. We should all work towards that. Thanks again.
I love this. Great education from a great professor, Mr. Beato.
Laughed when, just after the "No 6th on major chords!!" section, he played Eleanor Rigby, where the melody pauses on an [A] note ("...floor where a wedding has [BEEN]") over top of a C chord. It's the forbidden 6th! Anyway, there are exceptions to everything, and the Beatles rule, so does Rick, and this vid was awesome. I am pretty uncreative with melodies and this is helpful.
@GeorgeGrosman
3 жыл бұрын
I must say I was surprised at that as well. I LOVE Django Reinhardt and 1930s music in general, where the Maj 6th chord is a staple, and the use of the 6th in melodies is frequent and, in fact, provides the color of the era. I think Rick is awesome and I can't emphasize enough how much I keep learning from him but this was the first thing he ever said that gave me pause
@1allstarman
3 жыл бұрын
Theodor Adorno was A MASTER MUSICIAN !
@dunn1052
3 жыл бұрын
Eleanor Rigby- minor is okay- 6th and flat 6th.
@shafersongs
3 жыл бұрын
@@GeorgeGrosman agree.
@tml17
2 жыл бұрын
Third melody note in Happy Birthday is the 6th over a major I chord. It does sound kinda weak
That's the course I need, wonderful TY
Great lesson. Here’s two songs I know that use a 6th over a major Chord well - 1. Harvest moon 2. Lakes of pontchartrain
As a guitar composer for book trailers about comics I love theory & Rick's points especially about avoiding too many roots which is what I do since it makes the music less bland and have more color as Rick notes. Great tips about writing out the melody and progressions to analyze if there's too many roots and figuring out how to replace them. Cheers!
Awesome tutorial! In Eleanor Rigby the example of the sixth over the major chord is a good example of where it does work: it’s on the 4th degree, so by adding a 6th it essentially becomes an inversion of a II7 (you could also do the same on the 6th degree in a minor key)
This is one of your best lessons for showing applied music theory. thanks for this -james
Thank you for your generosity, after years of me asking people who give me bs for answers
Just downloaded the Beato Book (trying to teach my kid), thanks Rick, and have a great Xmas!
As someone with literally zero music theory and a relatively new found inspiration for song writing, technically, I don't even know my ninth's from my elbow, that was inspiring. When you played Nirvana and sang the melody, suddenly it made sense. Many thanks.
so crazy how i just learned this song on bass yesterday and was analyzing it too
Thanks Rick, I love these videos.
great stuff Rick! well presented and clear
love this vid, thanks Rick!
After viewing this and hearing these amazing and insightful tips, I immediately went to buy the book! Such great bits of songwriting knowledge must come from a vast depth of knowledge that I only hope I can glean some of it from the book. Thank you, Rick!
This persuaded me to purchase the ear training course. Great stuff, thank you!
Thank You so much Rick!