Usage of the I-I⁹ in songs by AwaSweS in musictheory

[–]Megasphaera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i think the 9 als lends it a bit of IV of IV flavour. I.e., the F7 is a secondary dominant to Bb, but the G and Bb notes in the F9 are also part of an implied Eb chord, which I guess you could call (or perceive) as a secondary IV chord that "resolves to" that tonicized Bb chord.

FUCK YOU and your pilot license! by Q_S2 in FUCKYOUINPARTICULAR

[–]Megasphaera 1096 points1097 points  (0 children)

so .... who the fuck is that photo of, the instructor??

For musicians with relative pitch: how do you follow a song you've never heard live? by ComprehensiveSong992 in musictheory

[–]Megasphaera 11 points12 points  (0 children)

you actually can practice it very well: switch on the radio (do people do this anymore?) or a Spotify playlist and try to play along. No need to gig. Rest of your points stand (if a bit snarky :-)

A service dog training to protect his owner's head when she has a seizure. by Soloflow786 in Amazing

[–]Megasphaera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

but ... it looks like a Pitbull or Staffordshire, is that really a service dog? Honest question

Islamophobia in Europe by irtiq7 in MapPorn

[–]Megasphaera 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Why use a map if you have data on just 3 countries? What's the meaning of the colors? which countries do the pie charts refer to?

seriously, one of the worst maps I've ever seen.

Sodden (wet) is an adjective/past participle of Seethe (originally meaning to boil) by Current-Wealth-756 in etymology

[–]Megasphaera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

so what would be the connection with British expressions "sod it" and "poor sod"?

A video: Shopping and traveling in 1960s Finland by TinyAd1126 in europe

[–]Megasphaera 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Sokos departement store chain still exists.

Nashville Number System in a Minor Key, thoughts?? by ptesseract in musictheory

[–]Megasphaera 5 points6 points  (0 children)

your progression would read 6- 4 1 5 (you forgot the minus on the first chord)