nullnaught |
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Joined: 05 Jun 2010 Karma: 22
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If the notes are the same for an A6 and it's relative minor, how do you know which one you are useing? Isn't the A6 an inversion of the F#minor7 |
Admiral |
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Joined: 10 May 2009 Germany Lessons: 1 Karma: 12
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It depends on how you look at it. |
MoshZilla1016 |
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Joined: 10 Jul 2010 United States Lessons: 4 Licks: 19 Karma: 16
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It's also relative to DMaj7
A6 F#m/C# DMaj7
e--2------2------2---
B--2------2------2---
G--2------2------2---
D--4------4------4---
A--0------4------5---
E
The bass note most time gives the key but that is not always the case. |
E.Koreman |
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Joined: 11 Jan 2011 Netherlands Lessons: 10 Karma
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nullnaught says: how do you know which one you are useing
It's your choice what the root is. Any chord is actually several chords at once. Each note is root to a different chord.
And no @MoshZilla1016, the bass note does NOT give the key. It gives the key of a possible chord which may be the chord you had in mind. Think beyond that. break chords up in intervals and their inversions. Understanding chords becomes much easier and you'll have much more freedom in playing. It works in melodies too. |
MoshZilla1016 |
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Joined: 10 Jul 2010 United States Lessons: 4 Licks: 19 Karma: 16
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I gave 3 examples with the middle one being F#m/C# with the statement..
MoshZilla1016 says: The bass note most time gives the key but that is not always the case.
so you said...
E.Koreman says: And no @MoshZilla1016, the bass note does NOT give the key. It gives the key of a possible chord which may be the chord you had in mind. Think beyond that.
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case211 |
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Joined: 26 Feb 2009 United States Lessons: 2 Licks: 6 Karma: 24
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...*facepalm*... |
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