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Wonderwall by Sanctuary is normal in the small key, but today we will run it through each of the 7 various modes of the significant scale to get a gauge of how each of these scales can use us a various state of mind and degree of tonal brightness.
The outro music to this video is my track "Kneel" which you can hear in full on Spotify:.
And, an extra special thanks goes to Douglas Lind, Vidad Flowers, Ivan Pang, Waylon Fairbanks, Jon Dye, Austin Russell, Christopher Ryan, Toot & Paul Peijzel, the channel's Patreon saints!.
DISCLAIMER: The viewpoints within this video are those of David Bennett Music and not always those of Struck 'n' Mix Ltd. The developers of RipX, Hit 'n' Mix Ltd, do not condone ripping of audio without the proper copyright authorizations. David Bennett Music takes complete legal responsibility and is completely liable for the option of tunes and artist hallmarks utilized in this video and any modifying and mixing applied to them. David Bennett Music indemnifies Struck 'n' Mix Ltd versus any costs emerging from stated use of tunes and hallmarks. No copyright violation is meant, and this video is for private learning, study purposes, and parody just.
ASSISTANCE ME ON PATREON:.
0:00 Introduction.
0:42 original version.
1:10 Major scale.
2:35 Lydian.
3:50 Mixolydian.
4:32 Minor.
6:43 Dorian.
7:34 RipX DAW.
8:22 Phrygian.
9:20 Locrian.
12:23 Patreon.


Perfect to find out how each mode operate
Yeah, I asked for more fun with a song in different modes. Thanks! I will surely enjoy the video!
3 things you should know about David Bennett Piano:
He doesnāt like the Beatles
His middle name is Bennett and his last name is Piano
He hates modes, but Locrian is his favorite
thats true
As Mr D B Piano, I can confirm all of those
I forgot one: His sponsorships have no relation to his content
You forgot that he dislikes Radiohead
@@vermillion2023 It really isn’t.
The Phrygian scale gets used all the time with dance music like techno or hard house.
also in heavy metal, specially thrash metal. the flat9 is the signature interval used for the ‘anger’ mood, so to speak.
@@thomasgorniak7192 nothing like a bit of aggressive thrash metal on the headphones when I am running late for work, gets me there every time.
That Major version sounded surprisingly good for a first listen.
And for only changing a single note, that Lydian version was literally a whole new song. Crazy.
Agree it’s crazy. I guess it’s because not many songs use sharp four and most have normal four… But still
Interesting how changing that C natural to C# changed the beginning just enough that even the minor scale version sounded a little off
That was cool, and I’ve always thought those were some whiny sounding vocals, and i still do… but that was cool to hear them switched around like that, and with different chords. I could tell something was wrong with those 2 notes that you switched, but I didn’t know exactly what, until you explained the twist.
Whiny for me is thom Yorke – this is like a throaty voice… But everyone has their own ears and hears stuff differently so fair play
I love these types of modes videos, the analysis makes me appreciate both the song and music theory even more. Great Video!
Merci, another awesome video.
I practice my modes scales in that order that David lists since it makes more sense that playing them as they occur in major keys.
I love these videos it would be cool if you did this with the chorus for let’s dance by David Bowie
So Paul McCartney and Liam Gallagher both sang popular songs where a word describing a 24-hour period is sung with its first syllable a semitone lower than what’s usually notated in sheet music.
That has to be one of the most niche things for two people to have in common.
I liked the Mixolydian and Dorian versions best
You’ve got the G#m and B chords back to front in the audio at @1:36
Locrian sounds like what Noel might have come up with if asked to write the theme tune for a Scandinavian crime drama.
I take note that even though Locrian and Lydian are on the opposite sides of this spectrum, that F# Locrian differs from F Lydian by just one note – the F.
Great idea for a video – really enjoyed it!
The mixolydian and dorian versions still sound like something Oasis would do. Lydian and phrygian sound more like a Pink Floyd song.
A very interesting experiment, but in the end I think Noel Gallagher got it just right!
Very interesting Wonderwall in natural minor
Nice ! Could you do a version with this 7 modes of my new song “Evolution” ?? š Jokes aside, my favorite mode is mixolydian as it was for the video you did with Bohemian Rhapsody, I really love the mix of brightness and darkness. Maybe you could do the same video with a Radiohead song ?