Chords for Never See Me Again (by Kanye West) - Piano Tutorial
Tempo:
103.8 bpm
Chords used:
B
Abm
Db
Gb
Bbm
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret

Start Jamming...
[Gb] [B]
[Bm] [Bbm] [Ebm]
[Abm] [Db] [Gb]
[B] [Bm] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm] [Db]
What's good everybody is your boy sir house of jazz
Yeah, yes, and I'm here with [Gb] a quick one for you.
This is a song.
I guess this was unreleased
So I'm doing a lot of unreleased songs.
I see I just got finished doing an unreleased one by Prince now
We doing one by Kanye West called never see me again, and it's just the same chords over and over again is
Like eight minutes long you can tell he was just demoing like had a little loop
He just probably played the loop was just doing some freestyling probably or whatever and never released it
So let's go over the chords.
It's not that many
First one is a G.
Oh Andrew green.
Thank you giving a shout out to Andrew green for sponsoring this tutorial
Thank you very much, okay
G flat major chord G flat D flat G flat on the left hand
D flat G flat B flat on the right hand
You can kind of go down out of you know, I'm saying [Ab] B flat [Gb] a flat G flat
If you want to play that little melody that the synthesizers man
So you got
Your second chord your left hand is on the same three notes G flat D flat G flat
But your right hand is D flat and you moving from this G flat over [E] here to a E
Okay to [Dbm] a E G flat [Bb] E B flat that's a G flat 7 chord, okay [G] G flat dominant 7
[Gb]
You can actually be honest with you
You can still play that G flat to be honest with you a G flat dominant 7 chord can always include a G flat
Well, I just wanted you to realize that so instead of saying you're moving it down.
Let's just say we're adding to see
I'll say it that way.
So you do this chord?
Now add to see
Yeah, I think that's a better way of saying it and
Then you can [B] go to
B major down here.
He jumps down to this octave double B on the left hand, but the F sharp there
It's not too much
right hand F
[Gb] Well, I guess I should say G flat just because the screen is saying it but when you're talking about the key of B
But anyway, I you should say F sharp, but I'm not gonna get into theory lessons right [B] now.
I own the right hand [Gb] you got
[B] G flat B and
E flat which is a B major chord
Okay, and then you want to go down [Bm] to?
[B] This is the B minor 6 chord
I know on the screen it also says it could be a flat diminished 7 over B
But B minor 6 is easier for me to remember and it's also the secondary chord that's listed that it could be
All right, or that you could name it
Not could be
Double B on the left hand you can keep that G flat in the middle if you want [Gb] right hand is [B] G flat a flat [Bm] B D
[B] If you take the B out of your right hand, you still got the chord
I'm just saying add to be to make it fatter.
Okay?
Now you're [Bbm] gonna move over to B flat minor [Bb] 7 B flat [Ab] F a flat on the left [Bbm] hand
B flat D flat F a flat on the right hand
then you [Ebm] got
This is a E flat minor [Eb] 7 E flat B flat E flat on the left hand [Bbm] B flat D [Ebm] flat
E flat G flat and I think this goes
He just hits it twice like that.
[Abm] Then you have
And you can make it an A flat minor [Db] 7 or add this to make it an E flat a flat minor
[Abm] 11 or a flat minor 7 [Ab] whichever you want
Double a flat on the left hand when I get to this point because of what I'm getting ready to do
I tend to [Abm] just play just this very low a flat because you got to walk it [Db] up
Like [Abm] that, but you [Ab] know, you do whatever you want to do if you want to double it [B] up
[Db]
You can [Ab] move it fast enough.
It's smooth if I go
[Db] right [Abm] hand a flat B [B] E
Flat G flat gives you the a flat minor [Db] 7 and if you add this D flat
It's a [Abm] flat minor 11 still works still work
Then all you want to do is take your bass [Bb] line
[B] [Db]
[Ab] [Bb] Yeah, so a flat to B flat everything else is chromatic B C
[Db]
[Abm] D flat so you got one whole step jump [Bbm] [Abm]
a
Flat to B flat that's your whole step.
Everything else is a chromatic
B-C and once you get to [Db] this D flat hit your a flat minor 7 a flat major 7 or a flat major
11 whichever one you decide hit it again
Okay, so you got?
So the whole [Gb] thing is
[B] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm]
[B] And
[Db] That's it that's all he's [Gb] doing throughout the whole thing
[B]
[Bm] [B] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm] [B]
[Db] Have fun y'all okay.
I'll catch y'all the next one.
[N] Peace
[Bm] [Bbm] [Ebm]
[Abm] [Db] [Gb]
[B] [Bm] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm] [Db]
What's good everybody is your boy sir house of jazz
Yeah, yes, and I'm here with [Gb] a quick one for you.
This is a song.
I guess this was unreleased
So I'm doing a lot of unreleased songs.
I see I just got finished doing an unreleased one by Prince now
We doing one by Kanye West called never see me again, and it's just the same chords over and over again is
Like eight minutes long you can tell he was just demoing like had a little loop
He just probably played the loop was just doing some freestyling probably or whatever and never released it
So let's go over the chords.
It's not that many
First one is a G.
Oh Andrew green.
Thank you giving a shout out to Andrew green for sponsoring this tutorial
Thank you very much, okay
G flat major chord G flat D flat G flat on the left hand
D flat G flat B flat on the right hand
You can kind of go down out of you know, I'm saying [Ab] B flat [Gb] a flat G flat
If you want to play that little melody that the synthesizers man
So you got
Your second chord your left hand is on the same three notes G flat D flat G flat
But your right hand is D flat and you moving from this G flat over [E] here to a E
Okay to [Dbm] a E G flat [Bb] E B flat that's a G flat 7 chord, okay [G] G flat dominant 7
[Gb]
You can actually be honest with you
You can still play that G flat to be honest with you a G flat dominant 7 chord can always include a G flat
Well, I just wanted you to realize that so instead of saying you're moving it down.
Let's just say we're adding to see
I'll say it that way.
So you do this chord?
Now add to see
Yeah, I think that's a better way of saying it and
Then you can [B] go to
B major down here.
He jumps down to this octave double B on the left hand, but the F sharp there
It's not too much
right hand F
[Gb] Well, I guess I should say G flat just because the screen is saying it but when you're talking about the key of B
But anyway, I you should say F sharp, but I'm not gonna get into theory lessons right [B] now.
I own the right hand [Gb] you got
[B] G flat B and
E flat which is a B major chord
Okay, and then you want to go down [Bm] to?
[B] This is the B minor 6 chord
I know on the screen it also says it could be a flat diminished 7 over B
But B minor 6 is easier for me to remember and it's also the secondary chord that's listed that it could be
All right, or that you could name it
Not could be
Double B on the left hand you can keep that G flat in the middle if you want [Gb] right hand is [B] G flat a flat [Bm] B D
[B] If you take the B out of your right hand, you still got the chord
I'm just saying add to be to make it fatter.
Okay?
Now you're [Bbm] gonna move over to B flat minor [Bb] 7 B flat [Ab] F a flat on the left [Bbm] hand
B flat D flat F a flat on the right hand
then you [Ebm] got
This is a E flat minor [Eb] 7 E flat B flat E flat on the left hand [Bbm] B flat D [Ebm] flat
E flat G flat and I think this goes
He just hits it twice like that.
[Abm] Then you have
And you can make it an A flat minor [Db] 7 or add this to make it an E flat a flat minor
[Abm] 11 or a flat minor 7 [Ab] whichever you want
Double a flat on the left hand when I get to this point because of what I'm getting ready to do
I tend to [Abm] just play just this very low a flat because you got to walk it [Db] up
Like [Abm] that, but you [Ab] know, you do whatever you want to do if you want to double it [B] up
[Db]
You can [Ab] move it fast enough.
It's smooth if I go
[Db] right [Abm] hand a flat B [B] E
Flat G flat gives you the a flat minor [Db] 7 and if you add this D flat
It's a [Abm] flat minor 11 still works still work
Then all you want to do is take your bass [Bb] line
[B] [Db]
[Ab] [Bb] Yeah, so a flat to B flat everything else is chromatic B C
[Db]
[Abm] D flat so you got one whole step jump [Bbm] [Abm]
a
Flat to B flat that's your whole step.
Everything else is a chromatic
B-C and once you get to [Db] this D flat hit your a flat minor 7 a flat major 7 or a flat major
11 whichever one you decide hit it again
Okay, so you got?
So the whole [Gb] thing is
[B] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm]
[B] And
[Db] That's it that's all he's [Gb] doing throughout the whole thing
[B]
[Bm] [B] [Bbm]
[Ebm] [Abm] [B]
[Db] Have fun y'all okay.
I'll catch y'all the next one.
[N] Peace
Key:
B
Abm
Db
Gb
Bbm
B
Abm
Db
[Gb] _ _ _ _ _ _ [B] _ _
[Bm] _ _ _ [Bbm] _ _ _ [Ebm] _ _
[Abm] _ _ _ [Db] _ _ [Gb] _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [Bbm] _ _
_ [Ebm] _ _ [Abm] _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ What's good everybody is your boy sir house of jazz
Yeah, yes, and I'm here with [Gb] a quick one for you.
This is a song.
I guess this was unreleased
So I'm doing a lot of unreleased songs.
I see I just got finished doing an unreleased one by Prince now
We doing one by Kanye West called never see me again, and it's just the same chords over and over again is
Like eight minutes long you can tell he was just demoing like had a little loop
He just probably played the loop was just doing some freestyling probably or whatever and never released it
So let's go over the chords.
It's not that many
First one is a G.
Oh Andrew green.
Thank you giving a shout out to Andrew green for sponsoring this tutorial
Thank you very much, okay
_ G flat major chord G flat D flat G flat on the left hand
D flat G flat B flat on the right hand
You can kind of go down out of you know, I'm saying [Ab] B flat [Gb] a flat G flat
If you want to play that little melody that the synthesizers man
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
So you got
_ Your second chord your left hand is on the same three notes G flat D flat G flat
But your right hand is D flat and you moving from this G flat over [E] here to a E
Okay to [Dbm] a E G flat [Bb] E B flat that's a G flat 7 chord, okay [G] G flat dominant 7
[Gb] _
You can actually be honest with you
You can still play that G flat to be honest with you a G flat dominant 7 chord can always include a G flat
Well, I just wanted you to realize that so instead of saying you're moving it down.
Let's just say we're adding to see
_ I'll say it that way.
So you do this chord?
Now add to see
Yeah, I think that's a better way of saying it and
_ Then you can [B] go to
B major down here.
He jumps down to this octave double B on the left hand, but the F sharp there
It's not too much
right _ hand F
[Gb] Well, I guess I should say G flat just because the screen is saying it but when you're talking about the key of B
But anyway, I you should say F sharp, but I'm not gonna get into theory lessons right [B] now.
I own the right hand [Gb] you got
[B] G flat B and
E flat which is a B major chord
Okay, and then you want to go down [Bm] to?
[B] This is the B minor 6 chord
I know on the screen it also says it could be a flat diminished 7 over B
But B minor 6 is easier for me to remember and it's also the secondary chord that's listed that it could be
All right, or that you could name it
Not could be
_ Double B on the left hand you can keep that G flat in the middle if you want [Gb] right hand is [B] G flat a flat [Bm] B D
[B] If you take the B out of your right hand, you still got the chord
I'm just saying add to be to make it fatter.
Okay?
Now you're [Bbm] gonna move over to B flat minor [Bb] 7 B flat [Ab] F a flat on the left [Bbm] hand
B flat D flat F a flat on the right hand
then you [Ebm] got
This is a E flat minor [Eb] 7 E flat B flat E flat on the left hand [Bbm] B flat D [Ebm] flat
E flat G flat and I think this goes
He just hits it twice like that.
[Abm] Then you have
And you can make it an A flat minor [Db] 7 or add this to make it an E flat a flat minor
[Abm] 11 or a flat minor 7 [Ab] whichever you want
Double a flat on the left hand when I get to this point because of what I'm getting ready to do
I tend to [Abm] just play just this very low a flat because you got to walk it [Db] up
Like [Abm] that, but you [Ab] know, you do whatever you want to do if you want to double it [B] up
[Db]
You can [Ab] move it fast enough.
It's smooth if I go
[Db] right [Abm] hand a flat B _ [B] E
Flat G flat gives you the a flat minor [Db] 7 and if you add this D flat
It's a [Abm] flat minor 11 still works still work
Then all you want to do is take your bass [Bb] line
[B] _ [Db] _ _
[Ab] _ [Bb] _ _ Yeah, so a flat to B flat everything else is chromatic B C
[Db] _
[Abm] D flat so you got one whole step jump [Bbm] _ [Abm]
a
Flat to B flat that's your whole step.
Everything else is a chromatic _
B-C and once you get to [Db] this D flat hit your a flat minor 7 a flat major 7 or a flat major _
11 whichever one you decide hit it again
_ Okay, so you got?
_ _ _ _ So the whole [Gb] thing is
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bbm] _
_ _ _ [Ebm] _ _ _ _ [Abm] _
_ [B] _ _ _ And
[Db] That's it that's all he's [Gb] doing throughout the whole thing
_ _ _ _ [B] _
_ _ [Bm] _ _ [B] _ [Bbm] _ _ _
[Ebm] _ _ _ [Abm] _ _ _ [B] _ _
[Db] _ Have fun y'all okay.
I'll catch y'all the next one.
[N] Peace
[Bm] _ _ _ [Bbm] _ _ _ [Ebm] _ _
[Abm] _ _ _ [Db] _ _ [Gb] _ _ _
_ _ [B] _ _ [Bm] _ _ [Bbm] _ _
_ [Ebm] _ _ [Abm] _ _ _ _ [Db] _
_ _ What's good everybody is your boy sir house of jazz
Yeah, yes, and I'm here with [Gb] a quick one for you.
This is a song.
I guess this was unreleased
So I'm doing a lot of unreleased songs.
I see I just got finished doing an unreleased one by Prince now
We doing one by Kanye West called never see me again, and it's just the same chords over and over again is
Like eight minutes long you can tell he was just demoing like had a little loop
He just probably played the loop was just doing some freestyling probably or whatever and never released it
So let's go over the chords.
It's not that many
First one is a G.
Oh Andrew green.
Thank you giving a shout out to Andrew green for sponsoring this tutorial
Thank you very much, okay
_ G flat major chord G flat D flat G flat on the left hand
D flat G flat B flat on the right hand
You can kind of go down out of you know, I'm saying [Ab] B flat [Gb] a flat G flat
If you want to play that little melody that the synthesizers man
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
So you got
_ Your second chord your left hand is on the same three notes G flat D flat G flat
But your right hand is D flat and you moving from this G flat over [E] here to a E
Okay to [Dbm] a E G flat [Bb] E B flat that's a G flat 7 chord, okay [G] G flat dominant 7
[Gb] _
You can actually be honest with you
You can still play that G flat to be honest with you a G flat dominant 7 chord can always include a G flat
Well, I just wanted you to realize that so instead of saying you're moving it down.
Let's just say we're adding to see
_ I'll say it that way.
So you do this chord?
Now add to see
Yeah, I think that's a better way of saying it and
_ Then you can [B] go to
B major down here.
He jumps down to this octave double B on the left hand, but the F sharp there
It's not too much
right _ hand F
[Gb] Well, I guess I should say G flat just because the screen is saying it but when you're talking about the key of B
But anyway, I you should say F sharp, but I'm not gonna get into theory lessons right [B] now.
I own the right hand [Gb] you got
[B] G flat B and
E flat which is a B major chord
Okay, and then you want to go down [Bm] to?
[B] This is the B minor 6 chord
I know on the screen it also says it could be a flat diminished 7 over B
But B minor 6 is easier for me to remember and it's also the secondary chord that's listed that it could be
All right, or that you could name it
Not could be
_ Double B on the left hand you can keep that G flat in the middle if you want [Gb] right hand is [B] G flat a flat [Bm] B D
[B] If you take the B out of your right hand, you still got the chord
I'm just saying add to be to make it fatter.
Okay?
Now you're [Bbm] gonna move over to B flat minor [Bb] 7 B flat [Ab] F a flat on the left [Bbm] hand
B flat D flat F a flat on the right hand
then you [Ebm] got
This is a E flat minor [Eb] 7 E flat B flat E flat on the left hand [Bbm] B flat D [Ebm] flat
E flat G flat and I think this goes
He just hits it twice like that.
[Abm] Then you have
And you can make it an A flat minor [Db] 7 or add this to make it an E flat a flat minor
[Abm] 11 or a flat minor 7 [Ab] whichever you want
Double a flat on the left hand when I get to this point because of what I'm getting ready to do
I tend to [Abm] just play just this very low a flat because you got to walk it [Db] up
Like [Abm] that, but you [Ab] know, you do whatever you want to do if you want to double it [B] up
[Db]
You can [Ab] move it fast enough.
It's smooth if I go
[Db] right [Abm] hand a flat B _ [B] E
Flat G flat gives you the a flat minor [Db] 7 and if you add this D flat
It's a [Abm] flat minor 11 still works still work
Then all you want to do is take your bass [Bb] line
[B] _ [Db] _ _
[Ab] _ [Bb] _ _ Yeah, so a flat to B flat everything else is chromatic B C
[Db] _
[Abm] D flat so you got one whole step jump [Bbm] _ [Abm]
a
Flat to B flat that's your whole step.
Everything else is a chromatic _
B-C and once you get to [Db] this D flat hit your a flat minor 7 a flat major 7 or a flat major _
11 whichever one you decide hit it again
_ Okay, so you got?
_ _ _ _ So the whole [Gb] thing is
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bbm] _
_ _ _ [Ebm] _ _ _ _ [Abm] _
_ [B] _ _ _ And
[Db] That's it that's all he's [Gb] doing throughout the whole thing
_ _ _ _ [B] _
_ _ [Bm] _ _ [B] _ [Bbm] _ _ _
[Ebm] _ _ _ [Abm] _ _ _ [B] _ _
[Db] _ Have fun y'all okay.
I'll catch y'all the next one.
[N] Peace