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Victor's Thread, for Gab's Army
Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 6 2022, 06:29 PM
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Yes! we can go for it. The first step as always is to write down the chord progression and identify the tonality.

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Victor Simion
Apr 7 2022, 07:45 PM
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Chords:
F5 G#5 C5 x4

And how we identify the tonality?

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 7 2022, 09:27 PM
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Cool! Let me guide you to identify the tonality. If that progression should end, what is the chord that makes you feel like it ends in a nice way.

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Victor Simion
Apr 8 2022, 09:08 AM
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It's hard to tell, I hear a lot of chords that are not fitting as a next chord.

But I hear a few that I think will work.
If I need to pick that one it's more like a guess:
I think the answer is :
D#5

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 8 2022, 03:37 PM
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Hi mate,

Wrong answer! One tip, the root chord is most of the time part of the progression, so in this case it should be one of the 3 that the progression uses.

Try playing the progression and end it with any of the three and let me know which one sounds better.

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Victor Simion
Apr 8 2022, 10:38 PM
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Not exactly sure, but I would say that it is F5.

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 9 2022, 06:08 PM
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Yes! Next step is to identify if it's major or minor. You need to get back to the songwriting course lessons....

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Victor Simion
Apr 9 2022, 06:35 PM
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I think it is a minor scale, and we have


The chord progession starts as:
F minor, G# major, Cminor


But I can't say exactly why the scale is minor

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 11 2022, 02:30 AM
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Yes! It's F minor. Using this lesson, please write down the chords that belong to F minor tonality:

https://www.guitarmasterclass.net/ls/Buildi...d-Progressions/

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Victor Simion
Apr 11 2022, 04:56 PM
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I - F minor
II - G diminished
III - G# major
IV - A# minor
V - C minor
VI - C# major
VII - E major

Let me know if the chords are correct.

I previously figured out that is a minor scale, but if I am asked why it's minor, I don't know how to answer.
How would you answer it?

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 12 2022, 01:22 PM
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Hi Victor! Yes, this is correct! And the answer to your question is here. As you can see, the three chords used in the song are part of F minor tonality.... You can write down F major tonality to discover that you won't find the 3 chords.

Does it make sense?




QUOTE (Victor Simion @ Apr 11 2022, 12:56 PM) *
I - F minor
II - G diminished
III - G# major
IV - A# minor
V - C minor
VI - C# major
VII - E major

Let me know if the chords are correct.

I previously figured out that is a minor scale, but if I am asked why it's minor, I don't know how to answer.
How would you answer it?

You are at GuitarMasterClass.net


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Victor Simion
Apr 12 2022, 04:20 PM
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QUOTE (Gabriel Leopardi @ Apr 12 2022, 12:22 PM) *
Hi Victor! Yes, this is correct! And the answer to your question is here. As you can see, the three chords used in the song are part of F minor tonality.... You can write down F major tonality to discover that you won't find the 3 chords.

Does it make sense?

Yes, for example F major scale has the note G, not G#.

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 12 2022, 04:58 PM
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QUOTE (Victor Simion @ Apr 12 2022, 12:20 PM) *
Yes, for example F major scale has the note G, not G#.



Exactly!

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Victor Simion
Apr 12 2022, 05:31 PM
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The chord progression is:
I - F minor
III - G# major
V - C minor

I - III - V
That means the scale we can play is F minor.

F minor scale:

I - F
II - G
III - G#
IV - A#
V - C
VI - C#
VII - E

But I see that in the lead guitar there are a few notes that are not part of F minor scale

String B fret 15 - D note
String B fret 16 - D# note

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Gabriel Leopardi
Apr 13 2022, 01:34 PM
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Hi Victor, this is the right way to write F minor scale:

F, G, A♭, B♭, C, D♭, and E♭.


D# is the same note than Eb, so the note is part of the scale. D appears as a passing note. It's the 6th of the scale, which comes from the Dorian more, and it's very used as a passing note in blues, rock and metal.

I'd like to recommend you checking this book if you are curious about music theory. Here, for example, you'll learn why F minor is written in that way... it doesn't make you a better or worse composer but it's nice to know the theory.

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