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4 Inventive Key Changes in Pop Music

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5 years ago
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    David Bennett Piano David Bennett Piano
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    Comments 29

    1. Betyuh Voamiuz says:
      5 years ago

      How about "Come On Eileen" by Dexy's Midnight Runners, Save Ferris, and others. Between the verse and refrain sounds like a downward shift, but the chords indicate an upward key change.

      Reply
    2. 2400cc says:
      5 years ago

      Great stuff as always!!

      Reply
    3. Samyak H P says:
      5 years ago

      in recent years they virtually disappeared because they are too complicated

      Reply
    4. TuberOnTheLoose says:
      5 years ago

      I've only written one song with a key change, and I did that on purpose after a conversation with a friend in which I told her I had never written a song with a modulation. She replied "well, write one then" and I did.

      Reply
    5. Vaughan Stone says:
      5 years ago

      Huge comment section here, but hoping my head extends above the parapet.
      Not sure if this is the best place to catch your attention David on the
      key change aspect of Billy Strayhorn's "Lush Life" that made it's first outing in 1948.
      It's not a pop song but I'm hoping this suggestion draws your attention.
      The song contains a dazzlingly large number of key changes that I have tried but failed to count.
      I am enthralled by the beautiful melody, harmonies and emotion in the
      main part of the song after the long introduction, which is equally
      enjoyable and musically very clever – but is eclipsed by the inspired main song
      with its awesome key progressions.
      There have been numerous cover versions but the one that knocks me out
      is Lady Gaga's featured on her 2014 album "Cheek to Cheek". I'd be happy to
      know if this song breaks the record for the greatest number of key
      changes … but I'm sure there are other interesting musical features
      that you David would be able to tease out of it. Strayhorn was such a
      genius. He wrote too few songs.

      Reply
    6. Me da Ghost says:
      5 years ago

      The entirety of Bohemian Rhapsody is an inventive key change.

      Reply
    7. philsipad says:
      5 years ago

      I've always liked the key change in New Kid In Town, where they decided to sing the last verse in G before falling back to E for the final chorus.

      Reply
    8. Manoel Oliveira says:
      5 years ago

      Loved the easter egg with Bon Jovi 😉

      Reply
    9. rucker293 says:
      5 years ago

      I think the reason we don’t see the “sophisticated” key changes post mid 1970s is many of the songwriters in the 50 and 60’s were—consciously or unconsciously—influenced by the popular songwriters in the great songbook era of the 30s, 40’s and 50’s. All the young writers coming out of the Brill Building machine, Motown and other notables we’re deeply grounded in these influences, as was Paul McCartney and others. This tradition gradually fell away. Thanks for the great content. Keep them coming.

      Reply
    10. Ingo van Thiel says:
      5 years ago

      This has got to be the most inspiring and helpful video I've seen so far on Youtube. I've been writing songs for a long time, but it always eluded me what key changes could do. What's crazy is the timing when this video popped up in my Youtube suggestions: I had just started experimenting with simple key changes in my songs, moving the last chorus up one semi-tone. Along came this video that told me "that's not all there is to key changes". It blew my mind and helped me understand how some of my favorite songs work at the core. Your video actually inspired me to write a Beatle-esque song called The Bystander: https://open.spotify.com/track/4C1C41XLXxySgnGyJU07lf?si=B0d8sVL3SjOKINbPtIbN7A. Thanks for the inspiration, the song wouldn't exist without what I learned from your video.

      Reply
    11. Milan B says:
      5 years ago

      For me the knockout thing in Uptown Girl is slipping in that Bm chord for "makes up" instead of the perhaps expected Dm chord that was used for "wants from". It is genius.

      Reply
    12. robbedontuesday says:
      5 years ago

      Thought you would be addressing "Sexy Saddie"…

      Reply
    13. dr louis cardinal says:
      5 years ago

      At 3:40 he says “fall into new key of B flat” but key signature still has C# F# G# which is key of A major. I’m confused

      Reply
    14. Alena DeVaughn says:
      5 years ago

      Can you PLEASE talk about the key change in “I Only Have Eyes for You” by the flamingos?? It’s the worst thing in the world and I have to skip the song once it reaches that part. It makes zero logical sense and ruins my whole mood.

      Reply
    15. Penis Parker says:
      5 years ago

      Space oddity had a good key change

      Reply
    16. Vic Correll says:
      5 years ago

      The song Taxi by Harry Chaplin has a very interesting key change when he begins the verse Something About Her Was Familiar

      Reply
    17. Grithron2 says:
      5 years ago

      Staying with guilty pleasure music –
      the "time to kill" bridge of Nik Kershaw's The Riddle is harmonically interesting – it starts with what feels like a violent key change, which twelve bars later turns out to be clearing space for a more familiar truck-driver-type modulation
      One I just thought of was Ride Into The Sun by Velvet Underground – 40% of the way through that song there's a rather abrupt key change, it then has an equally abrupt (but not illogical) route back to the home key, before the song closes out with a plagal cadence riff, as all Lou Reed songs must!
      (A more comical take on "the abrupt key change and the escape route away from it" is My American Friend by John Otway, where it sounds as if, in the nick of time, he remembered his lack of vocal range).
      BTW: Yes I always thought the bridge of We've Only Just Begun, or rather the transitions to and from it, ranked among the great key changes in pop.

      Reply
    18. GrumpyOldMan says:
      5 years ago

      Brilliant.

      Reply
    19. Christian Thompson says:
      5 years ago

      In Bruce Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart”, there’s a key change in the instrumental break. It changes the feel of the next verse, even though it’s dropping back into the original key.

      Reply
    20. WillN2Go1 says:
      5 years ago

      So this is all really interesting. Are there any songs that are very good but completely conventional? Entirely in 4/4 simple shift from major to minor and back again?

      Reply
    21. oliboulala says:
      5 years ago

      Thanks so much for these videos, my music theory is really quite non-existent but the way you break down songs and use music terminology and clear music notation to describe what is going on is really helpful in understanding the mechanics of it all. I know you've said in previous videos that music theory is really just a tool which you can use to describe why songs make you feel a certain way and this point made me think about theory in a whole new way. Watching these videos makes me feel a lot more confident in learning music theory, your explanations are fantastic!

      Reply
    22. aicram62 says:
      5 years ago

      Because people can't sing

      Reply
    23. RageDpxbro 08 says:
      5 years ago

      I just watched unnas annus so yeah

      Reply
    24. MegaMarko8 says:
      5 years ago

      I don't know if its key change is inventive, but i really love Taro by alt-J

      Reply
    25. Rafi Fuentes says:
      5 years ago

      Can you analyze this song's hidden and clever key change at 2:51? Spanish pop song from 1986 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lX_o4oT3p6k

      Reply
    26. DrMontrays says:
      5 years ago

      Theres this song called goodbyes by post malone and young thug, if you skip to 2:13, here is the song link:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QumPpMqaxxo the line right before post malone starts singing, if he were to
      go one "thing" deeper it would sound so good, i hope you know what im talking about, and I came to this video to find what its
      called and everything like how I horribly explained it. It's like how when you're explaining key changes for man in the mirror, it rises, but this
      song and many other songs are sometimes always calm and then they get lower for one line. you're probably not gonna see this but if you and can't understand me, atleast reply with something bc I wrote all of this 🙁

      Reply
    27. Larry Lorenzen says:
      5 years ago

      The key change From E to C in Uptown Girl is known in classical terms as a deceptive cadence. That is because the D# in the B chord goes to E as it normally would but that E is the third of the C chord instead of the root of the E chord. It happens all the time in classical and jazz music.

      Reply
    28. mikemb123 says:
      5 years ago

      "Uptown Girl" is an example of word painting, when he says "Uptown Girl" the key goes up.

      Reply
    29. starrynowhere says:
      5 years ago

      Drive In Saturday?

      Reply

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