Tutorial Intermediate

How to play "You Are Good"

Data Saver
Song by Ntokozo Mbamba
Original KeyE
BPM174
Time Sig3/4

One of the most powerful praise anthems in modern African gospel is “You Are Good” by Ntokozo Mbambo. While the message is simple—celebrating the goodness of God—the musical arrangement is a masterclass in energy management and key modulation.

In this tutorial, we are breaking down the core progression that carries the song from its starting point in E Major all the way up to its triumphant climax in A Major.

1. The Core Progression: The 4-1-5-6

The beauty of this song is its consistency. Regardless of which key you are in, the movement remains the same. The song actually starts on the 4-chord, which gives it that “floating” praise feel before it resolves to the root.

The Formula: * 4 (The Subdominant)

  • 1 (The Root)
  • 5 (The Dominant)
  • 6 (The Relative Minor)

2. Navigating the Modulations (Step-by-Step)

Phase 1: The Key of E Major

We start the song here. In E Major, your fingers are navigating a “sharp” key topography.

  • 4: A Major
  • 1: E Major
  • 5: B Major
  • 6: C# Minor

Phase 2: Moving to F Major

As the energy builds, the song shifts up a half-step.

  • 4: Bb Major
  • 1: F Major
  • 5: C Major
  • 6: D Minor

Phase 3: The Key of G Major

The climb continues! Here, the chords feel a bit more familiar to most players.

  • 4: C Major
  • 1: G Major
  • 5: D Major
  • 6: E Minor

Phase 4: The Final Destination (A Major)

By the time the song reaches A Major, the atmosphere is at its peak. Interestingly, the chord we started with as a “4” (A Major) has now become our home “1.”

  • 4: D Major
  • 1: A Major
  • 5: E Major
  • 6: F# Minor

3. Expert Tip: The “Walk-Up” Transition

What makes Ntokozo’s version so interesting is how the band handles the key changes. To transition smoothly, I recommend using a chromatic walk-up to the new 4-chord. Every time the singer signals a key up, don’t just jump—walk your bass from the current 1 up to the new 4 to bridge the gap.

4. Conquering the “Weird” Keys

Many gospel players rely on the transpose button when they see keys like E Major or A Major. In this tutorial, I encourage you to “kill the button.” By learning this 4-1-5-6 progression across all four keys, you are building the physical topography and muscle memory needed to play in any environment without fear.

Practice Challenge:

Try playing the “Hallelujah” loop in F, then immediately jump to G without stopping. If you can keep the 4-1-5-6 rhythm consistent, you’ve mastered the hardest part of the song!

Verse

Hallelujah
You are good
Hallelujah
Yes, You are good
Hallelujah
You are
Hallelujah
Yes, You are good

Chorus

Hallelujah
Hallelujah
You are good
You are good
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Yes, You are good
You are good

Bridge

You are good all the time
All the time, You are good
Hallelujah
You are good
All the time, all the time
You are good

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