Simple guitar chord voicings are marked with a number representing the recommended fingers to use for fretting a chord:
1 index finger
2 middle finger
3 ring finger
4 little finger
o play open string
x do not play open string
( bar one finger over more than one string
T that rare occasion that I recommend you use your thumb to fret a note
Here's the B diminished chord (Bdim):
If you're a beginning guitarist, or starting out with music in general, you can keep this chord in mind for later. Depending on the genre of music, a diminished chord is usually used in transition between two chords. It has this ... unsettling ... quality about it, so you'll really only use a diminshed chord in passing, or if you're playing some diabolically heavy music. So, you might want to take the opportunity now to practice previous chords.
Keyboardists, the combination of B, D, and F notes create Bdim. The F note, a flattened 5th in the context of the chord, is what makes this chord unsettling.
And here's the D minor (minor) 7th chord (Dm7):
Guitarists, take that F chord that perhaps has been vexing you, and lift your ring finger. Play the D, G, B, and high E strings. That's Dm7. Be sure to avoid the open Low E string (x). If you hit the open A string, that's okay: The A note is still part of the chord; you're just playing a lower bass note.
Keyboardists, take the Dm chord, and add a C note, preferably higher in pitch than the D root note, but inversions have their place to make the music more interesting. You're adding a minor 7th note to the minor chord, so that's why I refer to this chord as D minor minor 7th.
We'll play two more chords tomorrow! Cheers!
No comments:
Post a Comment
We'd love to hear from you! If you spot a typo or musical inconsistency (it sometimes happens), please let us know (please be nice, too). Thanks!
Comments on each post close after seven days.