StringDancer Chord Book

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    by Jeff Foster~~ Guitarist and Webmaster of StringDancer.com ~~

    Chords are among the most basic components of all the songs we hear. Armed

    with nothing more than a handful of chords and a melody in their heads, songwriters

    since the beginning of time have been spinning their tunes. Chords are also the

    foundation supporting every instrumental masterpiece ever written.

    A series of different chords come together in what we call aprogression, and the

    particular arrangement of chords create the melodic possibilities of the tune. Often

    a songwriter will start with a series of chords, explore the melodic alternatives resulting

    from the progression, and eventually settles on a melody for the song. Other times a

    songwriter will have a melody in mind, and explores various chord progressions,

    looking for a particular sequence of chords that sounds good behind the melody.

    Chords can be very simple, with as few as two or three notes. A 3-tone chord is

    called a triad. Standard guitar chords often utilize octaves of notes already used, so a

    full 6-string chord may still involve only three pitch names, each pitch doubled an

    octave higher or lower. There are two primary forms of triads, the majorand minor,

    which can be extended by adding other notes, to the point where up to six distinct

    notes can be included in a guitar chord.

    While by no means exhaustive, this chord book should give beginning guitarists a

    handle on the most commonly-used guitar chords (plus a little theory). It covers

    simple open chords, the more difficult but extremely versatile movable barre chords, as

    well as the simplest of all chords,power chords, used a great deal in rock and blues.

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    Reading Chord Diagrams

    Chord diagrams are simple graphic representations of how chords

    "look" on the guitar. In the example on the left, the vertical lines

    represent the strings, and the horizontal lines represent the frets. The

    dots indicate where your fingers are to be placed to produce the

    chord.

    The numbers or symbols between the chord name and the top of each string indicates

    the finger to use for the note on that string:

    1 = index2 = middle

    3 = ring4 = littleO = open (not fingered)X = closed (not played)

    You will notice that most of these dots are black, but that some are red, and those

    chords without red dots have a small blue underline on one of the open (unfingered)

    strings. This red indicates the rootof the chord -- in other words, if the chord is C major,

    the red dot is a "C" note; if the chord is A minor, the red underlined open fifth string is

    an "A" note.

    Identifying the root of the chord is important for later making these simple open chord

    forms movable. As they are fingered here, these chord forms are *not* movable (e.g.

    the C major *cannot* be shifted up the neck to create a major chord of a different

    pitch), but with some simple alterations in the fingering, these basic forms can be

    made movable. We will cover the most common movable chord forms in another chart.

    These simple major and minor chords will get you through a lot of songs. If you comeacross a chord with just a 7 in it (C7, G7, etc), use the major form for now. These so-

    called "7th" chords are more properly known as dominant chords, and you will want to

    learn them to flesh out your chord arsenal.

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    Basic Open Chords

    This chart gives you the basic major and minor chords for the guitar in standard tuning.

    You will notice a "4" sitting on a fret line in the last two minor chords. This indicates thatthe 1st finger should be positioned at the fourth fret.

    A Note On Relative Major and Minor Chords

    For every major chord, there is what we call a relative minor chord. On our chart, the

    relative minor chord is immediately below it's relative major chord (e.g. C major - A

    minor). If you are familiar with a major scale, the root of the relative minor is the sixth

    tone in the scale (Do, re, me, fa, so, LA, te, do). Relative majors and minors share

    several notes, and while not interchangable, do produce compatible harmonies.

    An easy way to locate the root tones of relative majors and minors is to remember

    this simple rule:

    If you're playing a major chord, take the root down three frets to find the root of the

    relative minor chord. Conversely, if you're playing a minor chord, take the root up three

    frets to find the root of the relative major chord.

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    Basic Barre Chords - Major, Minor and Dominant

    One of the many cool things about the guitar is the fact that several basic chord forms

    are movable. This is a trait which guitar shares with many other stringed instruments,

    both fretted and unfretted. Due to the lovable idiosyncracies of the guitar, you can

    learn a few barre chords, and -- by simply sliding those chord forms up or down the

    neck -- achieve chords of any tonality(root tone or pitch). With keyboards and most

    other polyphonic instruments, such is not the case. You have to learn a different

    fingering for each chord, in each key. In this regard, guitar has an advantage.

    Barre chords make use of one finger to play more than one string. Usually the

    index finger will lay stretched across 5 or 6 strings, resembling a "bar". Other fingers

    can also play barre chords, of course.

    The secret to this mobility is that these chord forms utilize NO open strings, and hence

    all strings change proportionately in pitch when the chord is shifted to a new place on

    the neck.

    The graphic above displays two sets of movable barre forms for major, minor, and

    dominant chords. One set has its root on the 6th string, and the other has its root on the

    5th string. The small numbers above the diagrams indicate which finger to use to play

    each string. 1 is the index, 2 the middle, 3 the ring, and 4 the pinky. X indicates that the

    string is not played.

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    Finding Specific Chords

    Combine fluency in playing barre chords with a working knowledge of the notes on the

    5th and 6th strings of the guitar, and you can position and play literally *any* major,

    minor, or dominant chord on the guitar.

    Sharps and flats (accidentals) are located between the natural notes.There are no accidentals between B-C and E-F.

    Say you want to play a G Major chord. By playing the 6th string Major form at the third

    fret, you have a G chord. By playing the 5th string Major form at the 10th fret, you have

    anotherinversion of the G Major. Pretty simple stuff, really.

    The same holds true for the minor and dominant barre chord forms, as well as for all

    other movable forms listed later in this book (major 7, minor 7, etc), which ambitious

    guitarists will want to add to their "vocabulary".

    Many of the simple open chords you learned back in the early pages of this book,

    in fact, can be adapted and made movable. It requires a refingering of the basic open

    chord to include a barre with the 1st finger, so that strings that were open can now

    move along with the other fretted notes . Roots for these chords stay on the same

    string they were on when played open.

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    More Advanced Chord Theory

    A command of major, minor and dominant forms will get you through a lot of doors,

    musically. If you run across a more complex chord you don't know, you can get by with

    playing a simpler version of the chord, skipping the additional notes. As long as you

    don't play a note that conflicts with the fundamental qualityof the chord (major, minor,

    etc), you'll get by.

    Here are some basic rules to keep in mind:

    If the name of the chord consists of nothing except a pitch, or else "major", in the

    title (eg: C, C Major, CMaj7, CMa9, CM11 also C6, C6+9, etc) you can squeak by

    with the Major form

    If the name of the chord has "minor" in the title (eg: C minor, Cmin7, Cm9, etc)

    ditto for the minor form NOT a half-diminished (Cmin7b5), though

    If the name of the chord has neither "major" nor "minor" in the title, but a number 7,

    9, 11, or 13 (eg: C7, C9, etc) the chord is dominant, and can be covered with the

    basic dominant form.

    If the name of the chord reads like an accountants' nightmare, as in:

    C Major13b5#9

    then you're dealing with an altered chord, where all the rules change, and you have to

    start accomodating the harmony or else sound woefully out of it. You'll usually run

    across such chords in jazz or more sophisticated popular music.

    Other chord types include the aforementioned (and highly popular) half-

    diminished (1-b3-b5-b7); the suspense-filled diminished (1-b3-b5-6); and the

    optimistic augmented (1-3-#5).

    "Slash" chords (eg, Dm/G) are chords that use an alternative bass note than that

    usually played. In the example given, you'd play a Dm chord on top, but play a G as

    the bass note. This book doesn't address these chord types at present, but may in

    future versions.

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    Barre Chords - Major 7 Chords

    Continuing now from what we learned in Major and Minor Barre Chords, here we have

    two movable forms of the Major 7 (Maj7) chord. The red note, again, is the root of the

    chord. One form has its root on the 6th string, and the other has its root on the 5th

    string.

    Again, by simply moving these chords up or down the neck, placing the "red root" on

    different tones, you can play *any* Maj7 chord you need. Just choose which one of

    these forms best fits within the context of the chord progression you're playing.

    Straight major chords contain the first, third, and fifth tones of the major scale (a triad)

    (do re me fa so la te do). You may be playing all six strings for the chord, but some of

    the notes will be octaves of these three fundamental tones. So your chord is still

    "triadic" in nature -- 1 3 5.

    The Major 7 chord adds the 7th tone of the major scale to the triad -- a note just one

    half-step below the high or mid tonic (te, and so the construction of a Maj7 chord is: 1 3

    5 7). This note gives the Maj7 chord a rather mellow, jazzy sound. You won't be using

    this chord in rock or blues very often, but in jazz, pop, country and many other genres,

    it fits perfectly.

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    A Word About the 6th String Major 7 Form

    On the 6th String Major form, you'll notice that the notes on the 1st and 6th strings, both

    to be played with the first finger, are NOT at the same fret. This is what is sometimes

    called a "cross-barre" chord. You still lay your index finger down across multiple

    strings, but in this instance you want to arch the index a bit, using more of the fingertip

    to hit the root on the 6th, and grabbing the 1st string down one fret.

    It looks far more ungainly than it really is. Once you get the feel of it, it's actually one of

    the easier barre forms to make, as you're only holding down the 1st and the 6th strings.

    An alternative is to skip the low bass note, bump the fourth string up one fret and

    use it as the root.

    This form works just fine, too. But you lose the low tonic(another word forroot), so it's a

    good thing to learn the full form, especially if you play fingerstyle guitar and can't stand

    the thought of the bottom end vanishing suddenly.

    One solution for this is to go ahead and grab the small form as described above, and

    then wrap the thumb around the neck to grab the low root on the 6th string. This is

    really a handful, and those with shorter fingers may find it impossible to make this

    chord at all.

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    Barre Chords - Minor 7 Chords

    Here we have two movable forms of the Minor 7 chord. The red note is the root of the

    chord. One form has its root on the 6th string, and the other has its root on the 5th

    string.

    Again, by simply moving these chords up or down the neck, placing the "red root" on

    different notes, you can play *any* minor 7 chord you need. Just choose which one of

    these forms best fits within the context of the chord progression you're playing.

    Straight minor chords contain the first, third, and fifth tones In other words , a triad) of

    the natural minor scale (1 2 b3 4 5 b6 b7). You may be playing all six strings for the

    chord, but some of the notes will be octaves of these three fundamental tones. So your

    chord is still "triadic" in nature1 b3 5.

    The minor 7 chord adds the flatted 7th tone of the minor scale to the triada note one

    step below the high or mid tonic. This note gives the moody minor 7 chord a more

    jazzy, less folksy sound. Unlike the Major 7 Chords, you'll often find this chord in rock

    or blues, as well as jazz, pop, country and many other styles.

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    Power Chords

    NOTE: The following is written in a satirical style, and would seem *totally* oblivious to

    the potential for serious and permanent hearing loss as a result of playing music at

    very high volume, not to mention the very real possibility of damaging your amplifier.

    On the other hand, rock & roll is "made loud to be played loud", as Joe Walsh was

    once fond of saying.

    Please be careful with the volume knob! Try to play no louder than necessary. Wear

    ear filters if moderation just doesn't work for you. Try to rest your precious and delicate

    ears every chance you get.

    And visit www.hearnet.com, a non-profit organization dedicated to raising awareness

    of the real dangers of repeated exposure to excessive noise levels which can lead

    to permanent, and sometime debilitating, hearing loss and tinnitus.

    ********************

    OK, folks, here's what you've all been waiting for! All this stuff about major this andminor that (although the dominant part sounds interesting) -- all you know is that you

    listen to your favorite rocker, things sound a lot more fundamental than that, right?

    The tortured singing of that lead guitar gets you pumped. You feel empowered. You

    can face another day, and kick some butt in the process.

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    Now, you'd think it would be a lot of bloody work to learn to sound like that when

    you pick up *your* electric guitar.Oh, contraire... there's nothing easier in the entire

    guitar riff repertoire than Power Chords.

    That's right. Power chords are so easy to do, you can learn them in one minute.

    Pay attention, now.

    See the big fat string on your guitar, what we call the 6th string? Put your index finger

    somewhere on that stringsay, at the 5th fret. Hold that down, and put your ring finger

    (the pinky will work, too) on the 5th string, up two frets from the first finger. See the "6th

    String Root" form in the graphic above for help with this.

    Now turn your guitar amp up to tennot just the volume, turn *everything* up to ten.

    You hear all that wattage just waiting to be unleashed? Now, pick just those two

    strings, the 6th and the 5th, with some gusto. Lean into it.

    After you brush off the fractured plaster and broken glass, you sit up and go, "Whoa!"

    Your mind is curdling, your ears are bleeding, and your neighbors are calling the cops.

    This is Rock & Roll! And these are Power Chords! This one you just playedcall it

    Power Chord #1.

    If you dare, just move the two fingers over to the next group of strings, the 5th and the

    4th. Same frets, as you can see in the graphic "5th String Root". Hammer your axe

    again, just those two strings. Hey, this is starting to sound pretty good! This chord is

    called Power Chord #4.

    What happened to chords #2 and #3? Who cares! This ROCKS!!

    Now slide those same two fingers up two frets, keeping the same 5th string form. Slam

    the two strings mercilessly. This is starting to sound familar. Power Chord #5 is what

    you have there.

    And these three chordsthe 1, the 4, and the 5are the basic foundation upon which

    ALL blues and ALL rock is built. Learn them well, and you'll soon see and hear

    different places on the neck where you can move these little things around and make a

    truly righteous noise.

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    How can just two notes make such a tremendous impact? Lots of wattage helps.

    And there are many, many "stomp" boxes (effects) out there that give you that cool

    distortion, that amazing saw-tooth wave that has inspired generations, without having

    to do it like we did in the old daysturning all the knobs hard right and wailing away.

    When you have such serious distortion happening, two notes are all you really need...

    in fact, all you really WANT!

    Nowramp your amp back down to 3, sweep up the litter, and go take a nice long

    walk in the park to let your ears stop ringing. =o)

    Want more? We have a rather cool online interactive guitar chord generator for those

    looking for additional fingerings of standard or advanced chords:

    www.stringdancer.net/resources/tools/gensix/index.html

    ============================================================

    Copyright 2009 Jeff Foster. All Rights Reserved.

    Visit Jeff's website, www.stringdancer.com, for more guitar madness.