
Scottgman
Legend in Own Mind
Man, these things have haunted me. I have a decent understanding of music theory-- but I am wanting to learn more chords with different flavors. Not neccessarily exoctic jazz chords or anything... just different positions of the common chords.
So I stumbled on a pretty good website (www.guitarbasics.com) which walks you through the major scale and each mode and gives several (or all?) of the triads for the given key/mode in the first octave. For example, one Cmin triad is:
E |--11-------------------11-------------------|
B |--13---------------13------13--------------|
G |--12-----------12--------------12----------|
D |--10-------10----------------------10----- |
A |--10---10------------------------------10--|
E |-----------------------------------------------|
Now the root note of this chord is G. I realize that you could just not fret the A string and that would make the root note a C. But how do you know it's a Cmin rather than some type of G chord?
Is it all relative to the other chords being played? In other words if I'm playing a chord progression in C, the above chord would be a Cmin, but if I was playing a progression in G, the chord would be a G?
Can someone out there help educate me on inverted chords?
So I stumbled on a pretty good website (www.guitarbasics.com) which walks you through the major scale and each mode and gives several (or all?) of the triads for the given key/mode in the first octave. For example, one Cmin triad is:
E |--11-------------------11-------------------|
B |--13---------------13------13--------------|
G |--12-----------12--------------12----------|
D |--10-------10----------------------10----- |
A |--10---10------------------------------10--|
E |-----------------------------------------------|
Now the root note of this chord is G. I realize that you could just not fret the A string and that would make the root note a C. But how do you know it's a Cmin rather than some type of G chord?
Is it all relative to the other chords being played? In other words if I'm playing a chord progression in C, the above chord would be a Cmin, but if I was playing a progression in G, the chord would be a G?
Can someone out there help educate me on inverted chords?