gx1327 | 2 Aug 2010 15:53 | Quote> |
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i have a nomenclature/theroy question here. so i'm deconstructing pixies' "here comes your man", just seeing how it's built. the first riff is basically just D A Em G played in the top string triads (similar to an open D shape). but there is another riff that plays multi-note "chords". but they aren't chords because they only have two notes. the tab is as follows: all on the top highest two strings e, B:
so the notes for these are:
number 2 is G5 and number 4 is D5. however numbers 1 and 3 are not entire chords. they are part of a chord. the first one (D, F#) is the 1st and 3rd note in D major. the third one (C#, E) are the 3rd and 5th notes in A major. but these aren't complete chords. i understand that they sound good because they are basically the same notes as in the chords, even if they aren't technically complete chords. is there a name for these two note half-chords? any specific technique on using them or applying them? and i assume these are just "learned" by forming an entire chord and ignornig some of the notes? i.e. the first one (e2, B3, x x x x) is just the same as open D major but ignoring all but the e and B strings... |