Published On Jul 12, 2019
Jacob Collier has a very impressive ability to work with and sing micro-tones. In this video I look at an arrangement of his where the piece transposes mid-song from E major, to G half-sharp. It's quite mind-boggling.
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June Lee's Transcription of In the Bleak Midwinter:
• Jacob Collier - In the Bleak Midwinte...
June Lee's Interview
Part 1:
• Interview: Jacob Collier (Part 1)
Part 2:
• Interview: Jacob Collier (Part 2)
Part 3:
• Interview: Jacob Collier (Part 3)
Masterclass at NEMPLA
Part 4:
• Jacob Collier: Masterclass en NEMPLA ...
Part 3:
• Jacob Collier Masterclass en NEMPLA -...
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• Jacob Collier: Masterclass en NEMPLA ...
Part 1:
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Songs
Jacob Collier: In the Bleak Midwinter
• In The Bleak Midwinter - Jacob Collier
Jacob Collier: With the Love in My Heart
Jacob Collier: The Road Not Taken
• The Road Not Taken - Jacob Collier
EDIT: During my explanation for the final A minor 9 chord I slightly mis-characterised the idea of the stacked 5ths above the A. In this case, the 5ths are actually 2 cents more (not 5 less as I stated) than the 'natural' tuning. Jacob used this to make the B itself higher this time, rather than making the chord beneath it move up. Sorry for the confusion, as I said, this stuff it complicated!