Skold |
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Joined: 14 Mar 2008 United States Karma: 3
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I play them like this
Root, Fifth, Octave. |
EMB5490 |
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Joined: 10 Feb 2008 United States  Lessons: 1 Licks: 1 Karma: 31
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wut do u mean? dont every 1 play them the same? or do u mean strumming them? |
mattmurray |
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Joined: 18 Sep 2007 United States Karma: 5
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I'm sorry, but is this really necessary to make a thread about?
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Skold |
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Joined: 14 Mar 2008 United States Karma: 3
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Yes. Just wanna know how others play them.
I'm talking about how YOU finger them. |
Cata34 |
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Joined: 29 Mar 2008 United States Karma
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Arent all powerchords a root, fifth and octave?? Did I miss something somewhere? |
Skold |
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Joined: 14 Mar 2008 United States Karma: 3
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From what I've seen, a lot of people say you play them "Root, Fifth". I however, find there's a lot of power behind that octave.
On a side not, say you are playing a G-C power chord pattern, you can get a grungier sound by playing that C like this
335xxx
Instead of like this
x35xxx
and this
355xxx |
league |
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Joined: way back United States  Lessons: 2 Karma: 10
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Yeah but for Thrash its better to play it on two strings. Better yet inverted power chords sound darker. |
Cata34 |
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Joined: 29 Mar 2008 United States Karma
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It's late here and my mind works not at this hour. So explain to me what an "inverted" powerchord would be. I'm curious. |
league |
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Joined: way back United States  Lessons: 2 Karma: 10
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Its basically x33xxx instead of x35xxx |
mattmurray |
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Joined: 18 Sep 2007 United States Karma: 5
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x33xxx is a perfect fourth, x34xxx would be a diminished 5th or sharpened 4th, and x35xxx is a power chord, the definition of a power chord really is a root note and it's fifth... so I suppose a power chord could be and combo of root and fifth as long as your bass note is the root note... |
Skold |
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Joined: 14 Mar 2008 United States Karma: 3
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@matt
Yeah, we just have different variations of the power chords. Don't know why I really care, though. I mean, I'm not really a fan of power chords.
Side note: I think there's another power chord that went something like 3355xx
Seems like we're just taking power chords into full on chords, haha.
Also, this is completely random, but I just got a mental image of a power chord in my mind saying "I wanna be a real chord!" just like Pinocchio would. |
league |
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Joined: way back United States  Lessons: 2 Karma: 10
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LoL Metal wouldn't be the same without power chords. |
mattmurray |
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Joined: 18 Sep 2007 United States Karma: 5
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@ skold, 3355xx, unless I am mistaken, would be like a power chord only with a G root note (in E standard tuning) making it some type of G chord
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blackholesun |
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Joined: 04 Jan 2007 United Kingdom  Licks: 1 Karma: 11 Moderator
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No, it's still a C5 chord, but with the bass note being the 5th. ie C5/G. It gives a great unsettling sound, excellent for grunge as Skold pointed out.
An inverted power chord is just a 2 string power chord being flipped upside down. mattmurray is correct, x33xxxx is C and it's perfect 4th on it's own. But if the bass was playing an F then it would unmistakibly become an F5 power chord.
When I finger them, I use my index finger on the root, my 3rd finger on the 5th and my little finger on the octave. When adding the 5th below the root, making a C5/G chord for example, then I barre my index finger across both strings. |
EMB5490 |
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Joined: 10 Feb 2008 United States  Lessons: 1 Licks: 1 Karma: 31
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root fith is a minor pwr chord i belive. and root fith octave is the major. |
blackholesun |
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Joined: 04 Jan 2007 United Kingdom  Licks: 1 Karma: 11 Moderator
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No, root-5th is a perfect interval - it's neither major nor minor. Root-5th-octave is just adding the root above the 5th, doesn't make any difference to how it sounds tonality-wise. |
EMB5490 |
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Joined: 10 Feb 2008 United States  Lessons: 1 Licks: 1 Karma: 31
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o...thought i read some where minor maj, guess im rong bout tht |
blackholesun |
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Joined: 04 Jan 2007 United Kingdom  Licks: 1 Karma: 11 Moderator
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I was talking on another thread ages ago about "minor power chords" using just the root and the minor 3rd, and while they are not technically a power chord, they can still be a useful part of your playing. In the same way, a "major power chord" would consist of the root and the major 3rd. While these do not technically fit in with the definition of a "power chord"(root+5th), it is worth noting that a power chord is not actually a chord, but just a two note interval (a diad) using the root and the 5th, and therefore the root and the major 3rd shares a lot in common with it and could be considered for use equally as much. |
aterrell |
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Joined: 08 May 2008 United States  Licks: 1 Karma: 2
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I'm pretty big on something like 335xxx; it sounds really heavy. |
TheUndying |
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Joined: 23 Mar 2008 United States Karma: 2
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i play ema a few different ways, and i agree with lead the inverted 5th soundsa awesome
I play em weird cause i like the sound
root - octave - octave fifth
x3x56x
or
(in drop D)
root-fifth-octave-octave fifth
33356xx
and of course
335xxx |
Afro_Raven |
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Joined: way back United Kingdom  Lessons: 1 Karma: 20 Moderator
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mattmurray says: I'm sorry, but is this really necessary to make a thread about?
I completely agree - why does it matter, a power chord is the most basic chord there is, both theoretically and physically speaking. If you're gonna start a thread about how each of us play a chord, at least make it one more interesting!
Afro |
KicknGuitar |
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Joined: 13 Dec 2007 Lessons: 6 Karma: 1
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I play them with ease. |
EMB5490 |
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Joined: 10 Feb 2008 United States  Lessons: 1 Licks: 1 Karma: 31
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ye i figured power chords are simple, and ther like the first ones u learn.. |
ThePusher |
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Joined: 19 Jan 2008 Canada  Lessons: 3 Karma: 3
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sorry too have missed this before, I play power chords very sexually |
EMB5490 |
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Joined: 10 Feb 2008 United States  Lessons: 1 Licks: 1 Karma: 31
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sexually? wtf? do ur fingers hump them when u do a vibrato?lol |
ThePusher |
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Joined: 19 Jan 2008 Canada  Lessons: 3 Karma: 3
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no it's a joke that me and my friends use that whenever somebody asks how we do something we say very sexually or upon occasion very homosexually |
blackholesun |
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Joined: 04 Jan 2007 United Kingdom  Licks: 1 Karma: 11 Moderator
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@ afro, I kinda agree, but if it wasn't for this thread then maybe some people wouldn't have used power chords with the 5th in the bass. Maybe a beginner had only been playing 2 string power chords, and now the thread has introduced them to 3 string power chords, or more. I agree that the way the thread was started was a little bit weird, and unfortunately it's gone weird at the end, but the bit in the middle could be useful to someone, and that's a good thing, right? |
Veqq |
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Joined: 18 May 2008 United States  Lessons: 2 Licks: 5 Karma: 1
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Normally I play normal power chords, but sometimes I'll do something like:
|------------------------------------|
|------------------------------------|
|-------------9-8-------------9-8----|
|-------------8-8-------------8-8----|
|-0-0-0-0-0-0-----0-0-0-0-0-0--------|
|------------------------------------|
So playing some other interval and then pulling off (or hammering on) to another. Lately though I've been playing everything Arpegiated... |
GuitarBoy666 |
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Joined: 20 Dec 2007 Canada Karma: 2
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I think he is saying that some people play chords with just two fingers, while others play them with three.
I do both, depending on what I am playing and how I wanna play it |
bobby23jones |
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Joined: 18 May 2008 United States Karma
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I usually play root-5th-octave with two fingers. |
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