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Finally! Upon popular request, I put together a comprehensive tutorial to teach you the basics of music theory that you need to know to make chord progressions in your music production, particularly using the cheat sheet that is available on my website. It's designed for beginners to music theory, who may also be new to music production. I show you how the notes and chords play out in a normal piano roll, guitar frets, music staff, and midi in Ableton Live. When you compose a song, you choose one (or more) keys for it. To make harmonies, you can draw from chords (a triad of notes) that lie within that key, combining them in different orders (chord progressions) for different emotions and effect (optimism, tension, resolution, etc). When you play a chord that is in the "key" of your song, it will be in "harmony", since all the notes within that chord are also those of the main key of the song.* Knowing the notes of your scale, you can also make melodies for your lead instruments / vocals that will be in the right key; these melodies go on top of your chords as they change. The challenge of the producer is to choose your scale, choose your key, choose your chord progressions, and enter it all into your DAW so it makes some sense. ✨ Cheat sheet @ http://annexproductions.eu/ helps you to do that *[DISCLAIMER: I've simplified some things, like the specifics of the seventh degree chord, because this stuff is already complicated enough to cram into one video. Also, I'm not a hardcore theorist (I focus more on the application of theory), so please excuse any mistakes you might find if you are one] This tutorial covers: 🖤 The keys that different hard dance subgenres are often composed in • ALSO FUN: Musical Key Characteristics from Christian Schubart’s Ideen zu einer Aesthetik der Tonkunst (1806) https://bit.ly/3pLwnSO 🖤 What is a scale, in terms of the number of different pitch classes (notes) it contains and the sequence of steps between those notes, in terms of whole/half -steps, or tones/semitones. These sequences differentiate the Major, Minor, and Harmonic Minor scales. I cover here the Heptatonic scale (7 notes per octave): the most common modern Western scale • Scales and steps https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_(...) • Heptatonic scale https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heptato... • Minor scales https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minor_s... • Major scale https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_s... ALSO WATCH: • Introduction to analyzing frequency and harmony for instruments in electronic music production • Introduction to analyzing frequency and ha... • How to use a note pitch to frequency (Hz) conversion cheat sheet for electronic music production • How to use a note pitch to frequency (Hz) ... 🖤 How the melody relates to the key, and what are the notes in a particular scale and key (I use the key of Gm as an example throughout) • Melody https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melody • Key https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_(music) ALSO WATCH: • How to sidechain your reverb in Ableton Live to make lead instruments more emotional • How to sidechain your reverb in Ableton Li... • Introduction to chords, progressions, melodies & harmony in Ableton session view using the Push 2 • Introduction to chords, progressions, melo... 🖤 What the difference is between sharps (#) and flats (b), and how to read and translate them • Sharps https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharp_(...) • Flats https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_(m...) 🖤 What is a chord, as a triad of 1, 3, and 5, differentiated between major and minor (middle note is a half-step/semitone lower) • @11:39 https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Music_T... • TABS app for all the chords of your favourite songs (I use this all the time to practice by ear on the piano) https://bit.ly/3btWl8j 🖤 What are the degrees of the scale, as depicted by Roman numerals 1 to 7, and which to focus on: the root, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh chords in any given key • Roman numeral analysis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_n... 🖤 The quality of the chords that are produced by each of those degrees [upper case (eg IV) = major chord, lower case (eg iv) = minor chord]. • Scale degree https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degree_...) 🖤 What is a chord progression, giving the most common 4-chord progressions and examples in minor keys • @15:37 HOOK THEORY! https://bit.ly/3keIDdA • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord_p... 🖤 How to enter the 2 different 4-chord progressions of your choosing in your DAW (I use Ableton Live), and how to turn this into 8 bars ✨ TIP: Start with a a piano vst to make your chords and melodies since is cleaner than like a synth, which usually have more distortion that creates different sounds that throw off your ability to hear the harmony well. You can switch the instrument to something more badass once you have chosen your chords. ~~~~ 👕 Support me by buying some AnneX merch https://www.artistfanshop.com/annex/ 📸 And by following me on IG / annex.hardcore