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As promised!!!! A Patreon exclusive lesson just for you all, my most loyal and lovely believers! 

This is a little bit of a preview of the kind of content i'm going to be putting into lesson packages in the near future. The no-nonsense, easy to understand TRUTHS about music theory questions that have plagued guitar players since the dawn of the D chord!!! 

Why do we use SHARP sometimes and FLAT others?!?! 99% of guitar players don't know the answer. Its shockingly simple. I'm gonna tear the roof off this secret today just for you all. Its gonna streamline your learning process and make memorizing all these scales SO much easier for you! THIS WORKS! 

Pardon the extra ambiance in the video; had to leave the windows and door open to keep cool while my AC was down. 

Files

Patreon Only! Sharp Versus Flat: The Truth

Comments

Anonymous

Wait until you tell them that you can instantly know know what scale to use by simply counting the number of sharps or flats in the key signature, and that each key in the cycle of fifths increases the number of sharps by one going clockwise and each flat by one going counter-clockwise...

Anonymous

I'm pretty good with enharmonics but am currently learning Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata on piano and in the 3rd movement, which is four sharps (C# minor), he modulates to G# minor, of which the dominant is D#7, meaning there's a ton of F## and it completely breaks my brain every time. I'd so much rather see Eb-minor, even if it has C-flat and F-flat in it.