IDontUsePicks (On 2012-02-08)
@644547024430 I sure as shit don't want to become as ignorant as you.
644547024430 (On 2012-02-07)
@FunnyCorpNN Whoa, hey, man, whatever gets you off, but I'm just saying, niggers, man. Think about it long and hard, and come back: Do you really want to become a nigger?
Thundermonkeyms (On 2012-02-06)
@jimFrobel Flanagan didn't "fail" at all. This is a pretty hard song for someone who'd never seen "Coltrane Changes" before. When you spend most of your musical life learning songs whose chords move in 4ths, and you get something that moves in 3rds and also moves at 260 beats per minute and Trane is playing 8th notes and making all of the changes, it can be pretty rough to keep up.
Thundermonkeyms (On 2012-02-06)
@kajikooo Actually this piano player is Tommy Flanagan, not McCoy Tyner.
NadiaSimone1 (On 2012-02-05)
magic 
TrumpetGuy7 (On 2012-02-04)
@TrumpetGuy7 D# Sorry.
TrumpetGuy7 (On 2012-02-04)
@COOLBIAN57 The whole is 2-5-1 and 5-1 in the keys of G, B, Db. Which are all major 3rds apart. And each time it changes keys, it changes in 3rds. Maybe that helps?
CDMI2010 (On 2012-02-04)
Nice!
COOLBIAN57 (On 2012-02-03)
Ok can anyone explain how this songs chord changes work, I've read a ton of guides online and youtube videos and I'm still confused. I'm pretty good at music theory too so I'm not sure why I can't grasp the concept of how it moves Keys down a Sharp Sixth... where does this modulation occur?...
TrumpetGuy7 (On 2012-02-03)
Aww, this video is cool.
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