Intervals, Intervals On Modes And Chords, Interval based construction |
|
Intervals, Intervals On Modes And Chords, Interval based construction |
|
|
|
|
Jan 10 2009, 04:24 AM |
Intervals, Intervals on Modes and Chords Lesson Structure -------------- 0. About Author 1. Introduction 2. Part 1: Intervals 3. Modes and Intervals 4. Part 2: Chords 5. Conclussion -------------- 0. About Author (Such a nice feeling to talk about himself in 3rd person mode ) My name's Can Karakuzulu, I am a 26 years old guy from Istanbul, Turkey and I've been playing electric guitar for nine beautiful years. I partly share Kris' story about being recently serious about electric guitar and I assure you GMC is the best place to do this. I am one of the chosen intermediate mentors from our MTP program. 1. Introduction Intervals, Modes and Chords Welcome to my 4th S.I Lesson, and my 3r Video Lesson! In this lesson we'll talk about Intervals and their relation with major modes and chords. Then we have part for building some seventh and extended chords. All this subjects can be found on Andrew's Theory Board, you can go there and dig deeper... 2. Part 1: Intervals We all know that the building block of the tone and intervals in western music is a semitone. Semitone is the note difference between 2 adjacent frets on a same string. Two semitones make a tone. And 12 semitones make an octave. There is a relation between the fractions of the octave that we call the notes and the root, which is our starting point. Semi tones in relation with root: Value NAME 0 -> Unison 1 -> Minor 2nd 2 -> Major 2nd, (Diminished 3rd) 3 -> Minor 3rd, (Augmented 2nd) 4 -> Major 3rd, (Diminished 4th) 5 -> Perfect 4th, (Augmented 3th) 6 -> Diminished 5th, (Augmented 4th) 7 -> Perfect 5th, (Diminished 6th) 8 -> Minor 6th, (Augmented 5th) 9 -> Major 6th, (Diminished 7th) 10 -> Minor 7th, (Augmented 6th) 11 -> Major 7th 12 -> Perfect Octave So what does all that mean? I believe you need hear the intervals rather than look at their names. Here you see how every interval above sounds like with root. Some of them are hard to play using these positions, but anyway its a good finger stretching exercise CODE E|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------| B|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------| G|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------| D|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------|--------| A|-7------|-8------|-9------|-10-----|-11-----|-12-----|-13-----|-14-----|-15-----| E|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----| unison minor major minor major perfct dim. perfct augmented (minor 6th) 2nd 2nd 3rd 3rd 4th 5th 5th 5th 5th - - E|--------|--------|--------|--------| B|--------|--------|--------|--------| G|--------|--------|--------|--------| D|--------|--------|--------|--------| A|-16-----|-17-----|-18-----|-19-----| E|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----|-12-----| major minor major octave 6th 7th 7th How they sound in my opinion: Unison: Perfect, majestic! Minor 2nd: Uneasy, willing to return to unison Major 2nd: Uneasy and dark, willing to rise to minor Minor 3rd: Sad but in harmony, mature Major 3rd: Happy, in harmony, childish, glorious Perfect 4: Dark, inspiring unity and willing to rise to perfect fifth Diminished 5: Tense, in pain, begging to rise to perfect fifth Perfect 5: Complete and strong. Strong emotions but indecisive. Angry, doesnt know if it's happy or sad Augmented 5: Full of Mistery and undecisive minor 6: Sad but incomplete, in need of a perfect 5 or octave major 6: Happy but incomplete, in need of a perfect 5 or octave minor 7: Mature and sad, feels like lived a tough life major 7: Mature and happy but desires to rise to octave octave: Very strong, decisive, strong headed, stubborn. But on a scale for example C Major: 0-> Unison 1->---- 2-> Major 2nd 3->---- 4-> Major 3rd 5-> Perfect 4th 6->---- 7-> Perfect 5th 8->---- 9-> Major 6th 10->--- 11-> Major 7th 12-> Perfect Octave 3. Modes and Intervals Ok, now lets check our major modes in a intervallic aproach: We already know that Major Scale (Ionian Mode) consists of: Unison, Major 2nd, Major 3rd, Perfect 4th, Perfect 5th, Major 6th, Major 7th, Perfect Octave It is to say: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 (in classical music notation) Well I find it easier to write down as 2 for tones and 1 for semitones so Ionian becomes: 2 2 1 2 2 2 1 therefore, Dorian is 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 So, all we have to do here is to sum the intervals to get their names: 1st interval value is 2 2nd interval value is 2+1 = 3 3rd interval value is 2+1+2 = 5 4th interval value is 2+1+2+2 = 7 5th interval value is 2+1+2+2+2 = 9 6th interval value is 2+1+2+2+2+1 = 10 7th interval value is 2+1+2+2+2+1+2 = 12 lets remember name of our intervals: 0 -> Unison 1 -> Minor 2nd 2 -> Major 2nd 3 -> Minor 3rd 4 -> Major 3rd 5 -> Perfect 4th 6 -> Diminished 5th 7 -> Perfect 5th 8 -> Minor 6th 9 -> Major 6th 10 -> Minor 7th 11 -> Major 7th 12 -> Perfect Octave ok than we can write dorian as Root, 2 => Major 2nd, 3 => Minor 3rd, 5 => Perfect 4th, 7 => Perfect 5th, 9 => Major 6th, 10 => Minor 7th 12 => Octave In a classic music we would note that as: Dorian: 1,2,b3,4,5,6,b7 So it is quite easy as you see. So we may say that: Phrygian: 1 2 2 2 1 2 2 1st interval value is 1 Minor 2nd 2nd interval value is 1+2 = 3 Minor 3nd 3rd interval value is 1+2+2 = 5 Perfect 4th 4th interval value is 1+2+2+2 = 7 Perfect 5th 5th interval value is 1+2+2+2+1 = 8 Minor 6th 6th interval value is 1+2+2+2+1+2 = 10 Minor 7th 7th interval value is 2+1+2+2+2+1+2 = 12 Classical Notation: 1,b2,b3,4,5,b6,b7 Lydian: 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1st interval value is 2 Major 2nd 2nd interval value is 2+2 = 4 Major 3nd 3rd interval value is 2+2+2 = 6 Augmented 4th 4th interval value is 2+2+2+1 = 7 Perfect 5th 5th interval value is 2+2+2+1+2 = 9 Major 6th 6th interval value is 2+2+2+1+2+2 = 11 Major 7th 7th interval value is 2+2+2+1+2+2+1 = 12 C.N.: 1,2,3,#4,5,6,7 Mixolydian: 2 2 1 2 2 1 2 1st interval value is 2 Major 2nd 2nd interval value is 2+2 = 4 Major 3nd 3rd interval value is 2+2+1 = 5 Perfect 4th 4th interval value is 2+2+1+2 = 7 Perfect 5th 5th interval value is 2+2+1+2+2 = 9 Major 6th 6th interval value is 2+2+1+2+2+1 = 10 Minor 7th 7th interval value is 2+2+1+2+2+1+2 = 12 C.N. :1,2,3,4,5,6,b7 Aeolian: 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 1st interval value is 2 Major 2nd 2nd interval value is 2+1 = 3 Minor 3nd 3rd interval value is 2+1+2 = 5 Perfect 4th 4th interval value is 2+1+2+2 = 7 Perfect 5th 5th interval value is 2+1+2+2+1 = 8 Minor 6th 6th interval value is 2+1+2+2+1+2 = 10 Minor 7th 7th interval value is 2+1+2+2+1+2+2 = 12 C.N. :1,2,b3,4,5,b6,b7 Locrian: 1 2 2 1 2 2 2 1st interval value is 1 Minor 2nd 2nd interval value is 1+2 = 3 Minor 3nd 3rd interval value is 1+2+2 = 5 Perfect 4th 4th interval value is 1+2+2+1 = 6 Diminished 5th 5th interval value is 1+2+2+1+2 = 8 Minor 6th 6th interval value is 1+2+2+1+2+2 = 10 Minor 7th 7th interval value is 1+2+2+1+2+2+2 = 12 C.N. :1,b2,b3,4,b5,b6,b7 Wow, this was quite a work! now we have this list a la classical notation: Ionian (Major) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 Dorian 1, 2,b3, 4, 5, 6,b7 Phrygian 1,b2,b3, 4, 5,b6,b7 Lydian 1, 2, 3,#4, 5, 6, 7 Mixolydian 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,b7 Aeolian 1, 2,b3, 4, 5,b6,b7 Locrian 1,b2,b3, 4,b5,b6,b7 Please note that only diminished 5 is at Locrian, we take that mode as a "special case". We can classify the other 6 as follows: MAJOR 3 Ionian (MAJOR SCALE) Lydian Mixolydian An easy way to remember is to compare them to Ionian: Ionian IS the Major Scale Lydian is nearly same as the Major scale except the augmented 4th Mixolydian is nearly same as the Major scale except the dominant 7 (minor 7th) and MINOR 3 Dorian Phrygian Aeolian (NATURAL MINOR SCALE) Lets compare them to natural minor: Dorian is nearly same as the Natural Minor except that major 6th Phrygian is nearly same as the Natural Minor except that minor 2nd Aeolian is the Natural Minor Scale Locrian is outside this classification because of that nasty diminished 5th, and this diminished 5th is the only difference between Locrian and Phrygian Modes. 4. Part 2: Chords Chords: a)Powerchords: Power chords are the most basic chord structure we'll ever find. Theoretically they arent chords, as definitionwise, a chord has to have at least three different notes, it means they has to be triads. There is a great S.I lesson about it made by Velvet Roger about TRIADS, I strongly recommend you to check it out: HERE So, if we return to our subject, powerchords, are actually two note played together, so they are intervals. Not a random interval too, the 2nd note has to be the perfect 5th of the root note. So a basic powerchord from A is: e||---------|---------|---------|---------|--12-----| B||---------|---------|---------|---5-----|--10-----| G||---------|---------|--9------|---2-----|---------| D||---------|---2-----|--7------|---------|---------| A||--7------|---0-----|---------|---------|---------| E||--5------|---------|---------|---------|---------| They are noted as X5, X being the root note. In the example video we see A5, A Powerchord b)Triads There is a great S.I lesson about it made by Velvet Roger about TRIADS, I strongly recommend you to check it out: HERE So Triads can be formed the following way, we take a powerchord and add it a major or minor 3rd. As Roger said previously, you can remove the 3rd and add a 2nd or 4th to make it suspended chord. Or you can remove the 5th and add it a diminished 5th to form a diminished triad or add a augmented 5th(a minor 6th) to make a augmented triad. How can you play this on guitar? Well If you should know it if you read Roger's lesson Well, I will show you a basic way to do it anyway, lets look at our fretboard. I take the note A as root: First, we take our powerchord shape: In this case, with our root A, the fifth will be E. For the ease of understanding I will write down the A major scale: CODE A - B - C#- D - E - F# - G# - A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 (We remember how to do this right? We start from A and follow this intervals: 2 - 2 - 1 - 2 - 2 - 2 - 1) CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -| -| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -| A| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Then add a 3rd. I want to form a A major so I take a maj3rd in this case its C#. I could take 4th fret in A string (marked with a x) but if I take this I'll loose my 5th. So I will go on, and take the octave of the 3rd (marked as C#) CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -| -|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| x| -| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -| A| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 So this is a triad. But we have a problem. If we hybrid pick this, everything is fine, but if we strum it, we'll have to mute the strings D, B and E because a triad chord may not contain any other notes than the root, the 3rd and the 5th. As this is not always a good option, we will find other instances of these 3 notes, and add fret them on D,B and E strings. Lets look at the notes around this position. At D string, 2nd fret is E but its far away, 7th fret is A, so we may use it. At B string, we have a E on 5th fret, and its near so we use it. And finally on high E string 5th fret is A so we use it. Our final layout is: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -| A| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -| E| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -| -|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -| -| -| A| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -| -| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -| A| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 How do we play this? there is 6 note to be played but we only have 4 fingers available for the job. Yeah right, we use a barré, we cover all the 5th fret with our index then fret the E-A-C# on the strings A - D and G respectively. You see, we even have one finger free now If we wanted to form a A minor, we would play C instead of C#, which is the Minor 3rd. c)7th chords Generally speaking, people who learn basic major/minor chords are known to develop a phobia towards the seventh chords. This is really absurd because now as you may started to foresee it, the notion of 7th chords is just a basic chord with a 7th addition. We have two kinds of 7th available, major7 and minor7. So technically speaking we may have 4 kinds of major or minor chords like: Major triad + Major 7 => Xmaj7 Major triad + Minor 7 => X7 (called dominant7) Minor triad + Major 7 => Xminmaj7 (not very common) Minor triad + Minor 7 => Xm7 X here, is the root of the chord but keep in mind that you may actually have something like this: Csus2maj7.. This is not a horror movie leading role star, It actually means we dropped the 3rd of a Cmaj or min, added a 2nd then added a maj7. You see its easy when you know about intervals Ok, back to 7th chords, how can we actually build one of them? We'll take the exemple of A Major triad from the previous example: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| A| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 I marked the fret where we position our barré with "o"s. Lets rewrite our A major scale: CODE A - B - C#- D - E - F# - G# - A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 the 7th here is a major 7. I want to show you something here. Notice the interval between the 7th and the octave. This is a semi-tone. There is only a semi-tone between the octave and the 7th when that 7th is a major 7th. Therefore, when there is a tone between the 7th and the octave, that 7th is a minor 7th. We'll use that rule for our advantage now: In our A major position we actually have 3 A notes. One as the root, One on the 7th fret on D string, and one on the 5th fret on high E string. So if we flatten this A on the D string, we are going to have a Amaj7 chord: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-|G#| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 And if we want a A7 (A dominant7) chord all we have to do is take that fretted note out: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 We can add another G if we want here, at B string 8th fret: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| G| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Other than that, we may have Amin7 and Aminmaj7, Lets take our A Major example: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| A| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Turn it to a minor chord by making the 3rd flat, Maj 3rd is C# so Min3rd will be C: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|oC| -| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| A| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Add the minor7. It was G, remember? (one tone down the octave) CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|oC| -| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 There you go, that gives us Am7. its even easier then the basic triad Or add the major 7th, It was G#. (semi tone down the octave) CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|oC| -| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-|G#| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 When you play this you'll see it has a very weird sound. That's why its not very common. d)9th,11th and 13th chords Well once you understand the drill, it goes always the same way. You just stack the 9th and the 11th over the 7th chord. There is nothing to fear here, 9th is the 2nd past the octave and 11th is the 4th past the octave. So all we have to do add them in our chord. Unfortunately on six stringed guitar you wont be able to play full versions of 13th chords as they need 7 notes strummed together. But we may extract one other note to play a more compact version of it. Here we go: A Major Scale: CODE A - B - C# - D - E - F# - G# - A - B - C# - D - E - F# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 There are several possibilities for a 9th here, the most common is A9, which has a major 3rd, dominant7 (minor7) and a 9th. That means we have to use: Our root which is A, Major 3rd which is C# Perfect fifth which is E Minor 7th which is G and finally 9th which is B So actually we are going to add a B that is higher than the octave A to the chord A7, lets summon that example: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 We have to find a B spot beyond the 7th fret on D string. Well that is possible in two versions either we fret the 8th fret on D string and loose the 7th, or fret the 7th fret on high E string. Both are applicable, but remember removing a dominant 7th changes the flavor of the chord so we have to put it somewhere, there is a possible spot at 8th fret on B string so we will use that one. Oh god! We are out of fingers So actually we have only one possible selection with barré in that place... One little warning: THESE CHORDS MAY BE TOO DEMANDING, AND WITHOUT ADEQUATE WARM-UPS AND STRECHING EXERCICES YOU MAY INJURE YOURSELF. PLEASE DO DONT TRY THESE WITHOUT PROPER TRAINING. CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| B| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 This is A9. Yeah that chord is not for beginners For a Am9 all we need to do is remove that finger at C# to play a C. CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| B| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|oC| -| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Better and better For a Amaj79 (it is not a maj(79) its a maj7 with 9th We need to keep C# and G#, as they are one on top of other actually this can be played by making a 2 strings mini barré with the middle finger. CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| B| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|o-|G#| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| E| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 -Man, in the name of Lord, why are you keeping that barré in there? Can't you see that lowest strings are E and B and they can be played just fine? I am doing this because, you can shift that position anywhere on the fretboard, so they are universal 11th chords have the same principe with 9th chords. You just stack the 11th over the 9th chord. It previous chord was a A9 for example, when you stack the 11th which is D in this case, you got A11. if it's a Amaj79, you get a Amaj711, and on a Am9 it gives Am11. Well try this: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| B| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -| -| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|oD| -| -| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 this is E11, yeah we cheated a little, I fretted D before the actual octave, but that will do because C# is not near the 4th, that wont cause a problem. But if they were in the same octave they would interfere with each other, thus will sound weird. And finally 13th chords... These cannot be played at full version in 6 stringed guitar, as they require 7 notes to ring simultaniously... Well conventionnaly, we omit the 5th, and we place the 13th on the gap. We have our Scale right here: A Major Scale: CODE A - B - C# - D - E - F# - G# - A - B - C# - D - E - F# 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 So for A13 you can play: CODE F| R| E>| -| -| -| -|o-| -| B| -| -| - E| B>| -| -| -| -|oE| -|F#| -| -| - T| G>| -| -| -| -|o-|C#| -| -| -| - B| D>| -| -| -| -|oG| -| -| -| -| - O| A>| -| -| -| -|oD| -| -| -| -| - A| E>| -| -| -| -|oA| -| -| -| -| - R| D| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Make sure you check out Andy's Theory Board as there you can find lots of different fingering and positions, Make sure you use Roger's CAGED Triads too as they can be perfect bases to build more developped chords. Still one thing is uncertain isn't it? Why did we used 1-3-5-7-9-11-13 ? But not anything else? Well that is because of intervals. Building Triads was actually superposing 2 kinds of thirds as for a major chord interval between 1-3-5 are: 1-maj3rd-3-min3rd-5 interval interval and for the minor triad 1-min3rd-3-maj3rd-5 interval interval lets take a Dominant 7th chord: 1-maj3rd-3-min3rd-5-min3rd-7 interval interval interval minor 13th chord: 1-min3rd-3-maj3rd-5-min3rd-7-maj3rd-9-min3rd-11-maj3rd-13 13th chord: 1-maj3rd-3-min3rd-5-min3rd-7-maj3rd-9-min3rd-11-maj3rd-13 maj713 chord: 1-maj3rd-3-min3rd-5-maj3rd-7-min3rd-9-maj3rd-11-min3rd-13 Yeah, guessed right, we are actually building all this using minor or major 3rd blocks I want to point out one last thing, Lets look back to Amaj713 A-maj3rd-C#-min3rd-E-maj3rd-G#-min3rd-B-maj3rd-E-min3rd-F# this includes, A major, C# minor, E major, G# minor, B major, triads. So we can accomplish that by saying this: minor 3rd + major 3rd makes a minor chord. major 3rd + minor 3rd makes a major chord. minor 3rd + minor 3rd makes a diminished chord. major 3rd + major 3rd makes a augmented chord. 5. Conclussion Thank you for enduring such a massive lesson. Hope it is clear and easy and please don't hesitate to ask questions. And please if you find any error on this feel free to correct me, I'll gladly do the appopriate changes... (-By the way why does a minmaj7 sounds odd? Probably because it is minor 3rd + major 3rd + major 3rd that makes a minor 3rd + augmented chord(which tends to maj6), which conflicts with min 3rd.) edit: corrected the broken videos and links, hopefully corrected a nasty paragraph issue. And also some minor mistakes, thank you Viktor (unreal)! This post has been edited by enforcer: Jan 12 2009, 08:10 AM -------------------- incoming spoiler read it at your own risk! Spoiler: it, surely, spoiled me!!! and may the force be with you :) |
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 11 2009, 10:58 PM |
Wow! What a lesson Can... Thank you for time on this one man. I'm sure it will be very useful and will not go unnoticed. Great job man!
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 11 2009, 11:00 PM
|
|
Good job Can!! Very useful, thanks for your time and effort on this.
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 11 2009, 11:02 PM |
Great lesson Can, you extensively covered all the topics in a very comprehensive way!
Thanks for referring to my lesson btw -------------------- "Don't practice until you get it right. Practice until you can't get it wrong." Guitars & Amps Brian Moore DC-1 Custom Shop (Cherry Sunburst, mahogany/rosewood) Eric Johnson Signature Strat (2-tone Sunburst, alder/maple) Ibanez RG770 (Black, basswood/rosewood) Peerless Journeyman (solid spruce/maple) Sixt Bov-105C (Ovation-like acoustic) - Ibanez SGT-130 (Jumbo acoustic) London City VS-1 (Precision bass) - Baton Rouge U3S (Ukelele) Fender HotRod Deluxe 40W combo - Fender Princeton Reverb Reissue 5W combo - Marshall JCM 900 50W Hi-Gain combo Effects & Other stuff POD Studio UX2 audio interface - Edirol MA-15D monitors EH Double Muff - Fulltone GT-500 - Fulltone Fulldrive 2 Mosfet - Guitarsystems TrebleTool Junior - Guitarsystems FuzzTool Junior Korg Pitchblack Tuner - MXR Carbon Copy Analog Delay - TC Electronics Nova Modulator - Morley Bad Horsie 2 Wah Shure SM58 - Roland PCR-500 midi controller/keyboard & Yamaha Clavinova CL-910 piano My Website My MySpace Page My YouTube Channel My Twitter Account My Band 'Gonzo!' |
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 11 2009, 11:37 PM |
That's one cool lesson, bringing the chords theory to the life... Excellent one, thanks for that!
|
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 12 2009, 12:07 AM |
Wow man this was a JOB How long did it take for all this + videos? Well done. I hope many will find this useful
-------------------- Check out my <a href="https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/instructor/Emir-Hot" target="_blank">Instructor profile</a>
www.emirhot.com www.myspace.com/emirhotguitar www.myspace.com/sevdahmetal |
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 12 2009, 12:57 AM |
Impressive stuff for only one day of work. Very well done man. When I record GMC lessons it takes me 8-12 hours per lesson. Depends how many slow videos I have to record/edit/render and also how difficult is to tab the whole thing. What you have done doesn't require all that but still you have to organise the concept and find a way to put it all together for easy understanding for everyone. That's something to be well respected.
cheers -------------------- Check out my <a href="https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/instructor/Emir-Hot" target="_blank">Instructor profile</a>
www.emirhot.com www.myspace.com/emirhotguitar www.myspace.com/sevdahmetal |
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 12 2009, 01:40 AM |
I totally agree with Emir man. Enforcer mate, you did one hell of a job here! Respect!
-------------------- - Ivan's Video Chat Lesson Notes HERE
- Check out my GMC Profile and Lessons - (Please subscribe to my) YouTube Official Channel - Let's be connected through ! Facebook! :) |
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 12 2009, 07:09 AM
|
|
Thanks for your dedication and efforts in producing this very useful lesson, Can. Keep on rocking, mate.
|
|
||
|
|
|
Jan 12 2009, 07:29 AM |
Great Lesson Can, great how you covered so many basic theory topics, and i like the way in which you interspersed videos with text. Thanks.
|
|
|
||