Saturday, January 31, 2009

Answer to Question on Tritones

Question from Michael Bell:


Thanks for the site it's proving to be very helpful to me. I am trying to find out some information tritones I've been researching and they are called diminished 5th's or augmented 4th's. I have been reading and reading about them and I understand the basic theory behind them but I don't know how to form chords with these. I have seen some very interesting videos on youtube and they really change how your music sounds. I would appreciate if you could forward me some info on these chords in like the key of c or c#. Thanks God bless you.


Michael,

There are two common kinds of chords that use tritones, dominant chords and diminished chords. So if you take a look at any of the dominant or diminished chords on this site, you'll see tritones in action. Or if you look at any sheet music and you see a dominant chord or diminished chord, you'll see tritones in action.

In a dominant chord, the tritone is formed between the major third of the chord and the minor seventh. For example, in a C7 chord, the major third is E and the minor 7th is Bb. This interval is a flat fifth (i.e., a tritone).

A diminished chord has a tritone between the root of the chord and the flat fifth.

A dominant seventh chord is made up entirely of minor thirds, and two minor thirds make up a tritone.

So a Cdim7 chord has a tritone between the root and fifth (C to Gb), the minor third and diminished 7th (Eb and A) And the inversions of those two, the flat fifth to the root, and the diminished 7th to the minor third (A to Eb).

But all of this theory about tritones is not particularly helpful to playing well. It's more helpful to just start memorizing chord shapes on the piano. That's where my books and my piano chords site come in handy. Once you've memorized the shapes, and trained your ear, you don't need to think about where the tritones are, you'll just know the right sound at the right time - sort of like vocabulary and speech.

One interesting thing with tritones is that they are a tense sound that wants to resolve. If you play a G7 chord:

G, B, F

and then resolve it to a C chord:

G, C, E

you can hear how the tritone between B and F is a tension-filled sound and it wants to resolve to the C chord.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Cat Dances Against Guitar

Coolest thing I've seen on YouTube in a while

This is a really awesome stop motion video with tons of creativity, a beautiful girl and some good music. Enjoy!

Sunday, January 25, 2009

New Sight Reading Game

Yet another sight-reading game.

This one allows for a more rapid-fire approach, for more advanced students. You simply type the note name of each note from top to bottom.
Here's the link:

Sight-Reading on the Grand Staff.

Or if you want to practice sight reading vertical notes (such as in a chord), you can do that here:
Notes in a Random Chord Sight Reading

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Test Your Knowledge of Piano Notes

Test You Knowledge of Piano Notes with this simple Quiz:







If you would like to find out more about my piano tutorials, check out:
http://www.patternpiano.com/
http://www.list-of-chords.com/

Monday, January 19, 2009

New Piano Chords Quiz

I created a new flash-based piano chords quiz tool, so that you can test yourself on piano chords. These quizzes are a companion tool to "How to Speed Read Piano Chord Symbols" and "How to Play from a Fake Book Without Gettin' the Blues".



You can test yourself by chords with a certain root here:



You can also test yourself on all 96 piano chords. There eight varieties of chords per root and twelve different roots, so that's 96 chords.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Sight Reading on the Piano - another flash tutorial

This flash tutorial focuses on the spaces of the staff in the treble and bass clef. The two mnemonic devices I use are "Fry All Canary Eggs" and "All Cows Eat Grass".

The Spaces of the Treble and Bass Clef

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

More Piano Sight Reading Help

Here's another Flash tutorial I created. This time, focusing on the lines of the treble clef, and the lines of the bass clef.

There isn't any feedback, this is just sort of a "move your mouse over and take a look" situation. I'll try to maybe turn it into an interactive game. :)

The Lines Of the Treble Clef and Bass Clef

Friday, January 02, 2009

New Sight Reading Tutorial

I created a flash tutorial game that focuses exclusively on the lines above the staff and below the staff. It also teaches some "mnemonic" devices for memorizing the lines above and below the staff.

The lines above the staff in the treble clef:
- All Cows Eat Grass

The lines above the staff in the bass clef:
- Crying Elephants Gulp Beer

The lines below the staff in the treble clef:
- Dog Farts Are Criminal

The lines below the staff in the bass clef:
- French Artists Crowd England








If you have enjoyed this tutorial, check out my list of piano chords website.