![]() ![]() Pachelbel’s Canon in D is perhaps the most famous chord sequence of all time, and the basis of dozens of popular hits. The Musicarta Canon Project teaches you how to play a chord sequence freely and put together your own unique Canon keyboard performance from easily-mastered musical components. It is intended for players who have completed the study programme - and for anybody else who is able to follow it. This is the Part One of the Musicarta Canon Project three-module 'Transposing' mini-series. The spin-off in terms of skill and progress of regular practise in transposing is significant, if hard to attribute precisely. Younger pupils’ ability to learn to transpose is generally underestimated. You soon start to see the relative size of the steps between the notes or chord roots, plus many other pattern features, and this will make it a lot easier to remember. ![]() ![]() This works the other way round – if you really want to know a tune, or a riff, or a chord sequence, try transposing it. You can really only say you know a chord sequence, or a tune, or a riff, when you can transpose it. Most professional musicians, both modern and classical, can transpose – some astonishingly well. The ability to transpose – to change the key of some music in your head and play it higher or lower than the original – is one of the things that defines a really proficient musician. Transposing the Canon Chord Sequence - Part One. ![]()
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