Which Chords Are These? |
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Which Chords Are These? |
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Dec 21 2011, 10:52 PM
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Hi. Noober´s here.
Practicing slow blues in A minor by Laszlo Boross. Wondering which those two-string chords in bar 4 are? Happy X-mas |
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Dec 22 2011, 01:12 AM |
yeah, in classical terms a chord is composed of 4 notes, root, third, fifth, and the doubling of one of these notes,
but in popular terms, whenever there's two notes, you call it a chord and that is a POWER CHORD! it consist of a root and a perfect fifth -------------------- Visit my:
INSTRUCTOR PROFILE "If a composer could say what he had to say in words he would not bother trying to say it in music." Gustav Mahler Subscribe to my Youtube Channel here |
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Dec 22 2011, 03:31 AM |
Some people call them 5 chords or 5th chords. I don't know what the proper terminology is. I call them Black Sabbath chords.
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Dec 22 2011, 10:32 AM |
I would call them A5, D5 & C5. That's the way I always saw power chords written in guitar mags
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Dec 22 2011, 11:52 AM |
Yes, this is 5th interval (interval: two notes ringing simultaneously). Root and fifth.
Example: A and E. On distortion, these two notes came out more defined and consonant then other because of the nature of the fifth interval. Here is one more example with another A added: Here, you have 3 intervals ringing: from A (low E string) to E (fifth), from E to A (D string) (fourth), from A to A (octave). This is also powerchord, as all combined intervals are perfect and tend to have more strength and "power" then other intervals, because they aren't dissonant. -------------------- - Ivan's Video Chat Lesson Notes HERE
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