Music Theory - Chromatic Mediants in 7 Minutes!

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2021-02-17に共有
Do you know what a "Chromatic Mediant" is? Well Guy is about to tell you, join him on another journey into Music Theory to discover what this is all about!

Check out Guy’s "Learn Music Theory" Course here
thinkspaceeducation.com/courses/lmt/

- - - - Learn Music Theory - - - -
A practical, entertaining, and straightforward course in how music works and how it is written down. Whether you are a guitarist, electronic musician, songwriter or just love music, Learn Music Theory will give you techniques to apply to your music straight away. This video course takes you from square one right through to more advanced topics like modes and chromatic harmony. 9 hours of videos, quizzes, course text and all for a special introductory price of £25/€25/$25.

This is music theory for guitarists, music theory for songwriters, music theory for producers - whoever you are this is the online music theory course for you.

Check out the free guide here to get you started: thinkspaceeducation.com/music-theory-in-under-30-m…

コメント (21)
  • "Is G# in the scale of C Major?" Finally! A music theory question I can answer! :D <3
  • You're seriously one of the most brilliant people. Not only do you teach extraordinarily well, but you have the brightest personality. We need more people like you! 👏🏻
  • Guy......YOU are an excellent teacher and wonderful composer. Thank you for all of the help! Doug G in LV
  • Right, I'm having a composing sesh later this evening, I will deliberately lob in a couple of chromatic mediants in your honour.
  • @peterpike
    My favorite use of the Chromatic Mediant is actually for modulation, since my favorite way to modulate is to pick up the entire piece and drop it back in transposed up a minor third. I "came up with" the technique by accident solely because of the mathematical properties it has. Basically, I was doing a song and wanted to cycle through modulations until I returned to the original key. I was going to do it by modulating up by 4 semitones three times, but decided to try modulating just three semitones instead (which would give me four modulations before returning to the original key). Happily, I discovered it sounded amazing to do that. Before that trick, I would often modulate to the five chord via the "five of five" technique (so to modulate from C to G, you throw in a D major first sort of thing), but modulating up a minor third didn't require any setup of the dominant or to throw in a leading tone, etc. I loved it because you could play something 100% diatonic and then instantly modulate on a repeat and it adds a burst of energy to it with a sort of surprise modulation out of the blue.
  • Please keep doing these. The format is so easy to absorb and the knowledge sticks!
  • You're a great teacher, Guy. Thank you for the great videos! Love you buddy!
  • Thank you so much Guy! This video was extremely educational and so well delivered. I’ve been watching your videos for a year but this one is by far the best :)
  • @islandc1
    That was fun! Thanks, Guy. I'd love to see more videos like this!
  • Very good!! Well explained, funny as always and simply useful to start trying it out!
  • @iamKASETA
    Thank you, that is very useful indeed! Really would like to see more of these short videos on advanced music theory topics
  • One more of your incredible videos I enjoyed and learned from. Thank you Guy Michelmore!
  • Really awesome tutorial. First time hearing such a clear explanation of chromatic mediants.❤
  • Very interesting - really enjoy these music theory videos - as well as all the others of course!