High Definition Standard Definition Theater
Video id : x02jj3UNCI8
ImmersiveAmbientModecolor: #e8bb94 (color 2)
Video Format : 22 (720p) openh264 ( https://github.com/cisco/openh264) mp4a.40.2 | 44100Hz
Audio Format: Opus - Normalized audio
PokeTubeEncryptID: 980dd2d1c039d4bcca3e8e377ddc842c1a8b3d53eb51b4837464ca6c68b28263833325d2de6b1341cb08bc041e43e64f
Proxy : eu-proxy.poketube.fun - refresh the page to change the proxy location
Date : 1715003145648 - unknown on Apple WebKit
Mystery text : eDAyamozVU5DSTggaSAgbG92ICB1IGV1LXByb3h5LnBva2V0dWJlLmZ1bg==
143 : true
Analyzing The Chords of John Lennon's "Imagine" - Perfect Progressions #4
Jump to Connections
174,498 Views โ€ข Oct 5, 2020 โ€ข Click to toggle off description
The Chord Progression Codex is NOW AVAILABLE! shorturl.at/bouLV
My pro theory + songwriting course: bit.ly/2J2Nctn
Enroll in my Rhythm Training Course at ANY price! bit.ly/3wDacU4

This video deeply analyzes John Lennon's Imagine, specifically the chord progressions used to make up the song. In addition, we take a look at the arrangement, production, and other musical choices that all sum up this iconic composition.

Music theory is simply a way to describe what songwriter's have done. All of the composing tricks used in this song were clearly in John Lennon's vocabulary, whether he used their proper academic name (secondary dominant / pedal tone / etc.) is not relevent. What matters is understanding why this composition feels the way it does, and use that knowledge to our own benefit as composers!
Take note- this song was written on piano. Even if you're a lousy key player, you should be able to take these chords to the piano and see how simple of a song it really is. You'll also see how the geometry of the piano itself probably played a giant part in why the song was written the way it was. It falls very easly on the hands.

Special thanks to my Patreon subscribers for making these videos possible! Especially these groovy folks:
Adam Granger
Billyshes
Bradley Bower
Brandon Combs
BuzzWasHere
Christopher Swanson
CrippleMonkey
Daniel Danciu
Darrin Goren
Donal Botkin
Don Dachenhausen III
Don Watters
Erik Lange
Jared Yelton
Joe Buote
John Arnold
jon reddish
Kip Ingram
Linas Orentas
Lord of the Chords Live on Indiegogo Now!
Marc Bulandr
Marek Pawlowski
Markos Zouganelis
Martin
Michael Galli
Morgan M.
Nick White
Patrick Ryan
Philip Sharp
Stumann
Sophie SKG
Stephen Marz
Tyler Sherkin

My Patreon: www.patreon.com/signalsmusicstudio

In This Video:
00:00 Intro
00:35 Verse Chords
03:00 Why Voicings Matter
04:15 Creating Melody Within Chords
06:25 Mystery Ninth
07:34 Double Tracking
08:16 Chorus Chords
10:44 Refrain
13:31 Summary
Metadata And Engagement

Views : 174,498
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Oct 5, 2020 ^^


Rating : 4.972 (70/10,063 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-02T13:11:01.106878Z
See in json
Tags
Connections
Nyo connections found on the description ;_; report a issue lol

YouTube Comments - 615 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@evalonious

3 years ago

Wow! I finally found a YouTube music teacher who doesn't make you sit through 10 minutes talking cats, stories of last weekends BBQ, or Magic Biscuits and Sunglasses that make you a better songwriter.

Direct and to the point! Well done video series!

Thanks!

80 |

@euphoriamusic6153

3 years ago

This guy is way better than my music theory teacher.

441 |

@irrefudiate

3 years ago

I appreciated the way the teacher started with 'basic' and gradually progressed to 'refined', while defining the reason for the refinement all along the way. It was so controlled and smooth.

56 |

@sebastiansilva962

3 years ago

I feel like the E chord in this situation (as in many other uses of the III chord) does, in fact, work as a secondary dominant, in the way that the resolution from E to F is kind of like a deceptive cadence. This works because F is a very similar chord to Am (F is Am's submediant) so it has much in common with, say, a V - vi.

91 |

@itsmikk2043

3 years ago

This is a very nice breakdown of 'Don't look back in Anger' by Oasis

43 |

@ericathlan3518

3 years ago

On the chromatic passage, I thought you were off your rockers. I could have sworn he did play a C and remembering it in my head, I've always heard it as a 4 note passage. I was shocked when I listened to it again and realised there was an empty beat with no note there, a serious (and disturbing) case of auditory hallucination ;-) Great analysis, thanx Jake.

182 |

@-JohnGalt-

3 years ago

What a great presentation Jake. I find it hard to learn songs via tabs or other videos, because this is what I truly crave; an informed and in-depth analysis of not just how to mechanically play the song, but how all the elements fit together. I always want to learn something from a song, something I can take away and use in my own music. You meet these expectations beautifully--not many do. Keep up the fantastic work!

83 |

@leoshirley-smith1560

9 months ago

Wonderful, thank you! I really enjoyed your beautiful analysis of this iconic song.

|

@raystaar

3 years ago

Thanks Jake, for such a clear exposition of this deceptively masterful song. If we could only find a way to realize what John imagined for us, we might have a chance to survive.

21 |

@RC32Smiths01

3 years ago

Imagine is one of the best of all time indeed. John Lennon surely wrote great tunes, whether Solo or with The Beatles.

51 |

@dandamerville

3 years ago

I've been hacking around music since the day after The Beatles (a band from Liverpool, England) first appeared on tv (short for television, a popular medium for broadcasting sounds and images in the last century). Every time I take the time to view/listen to one of Jake's offerings, I learn so much about topics I thought I knew pretty much everything about. Thank you, Jake, for reminding me (once again) that musicianship is an endless journey, always more to learn.

3 |

@donkeyfacekilla1

3 years ago

Excellent video. These are so helpful. Your explanations really help demystify the theory but also highlight the beauty of the songs and the depth of quality songwritingn

1 |

@jajlertil

3 years ago

This channel is constantly putting out pure quality content and joy for music, loving it!

10 |

@markkington423

1 year ago

brother, love ya work mate. not often you find such an engaging teacher of the craft of writing music. thanking you for your consistency in delivery of this information.. cheers mate

|

@ikozbari

3 years ago

I have to lose this: this channel is just brilliant, the presentation, the topics, the explanations and just your delivery makes a complete package that i really enjoy. One of the few rare channels that actually teaches something.

Keep it up and thanks alot.

5 |

@johnpatowary

3 years ago

This is brilliant...you seriously do the most amazing dissection of classics! This was sheer perfection! Absolutely loved it๐Ÿ‘

|

@troybrennan

3 years ago

love your idea of analyzing chord progressions and their respective feelings they elicit. I was just looking yesterday on how to elicit certain feelings via chord progressions so I hope you do some more of these!

|

@Adamido

3 years ago

Hey Jake, thank you so much!
These videos are a lot of help. Keep on rocking!

|

@JeffMountainPicker

1 year ago

Excellent video with the very talented Jake Lizzio guiding us gently through a beautifully simple song with tons of clever subtleties.
Thank you for that, Jake!

|

@Corey_G

2 years ago

Great Analysis!!!

Love these types of videos, canโ€™t get enough of them!

I would love to see hundreds of great songs broken down how you explain them.

Great explanations, and video visuals.

Thanks for Sharing.
๐Ÿ˜๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘

|

Go To Top