جهت استعلام قیمت، خرید و مشاهده نمونه صفحه محصول، لطفاً از طریق پشتیبانی فروشگاه در واتساپ و تلگرام اقدام فرمایید.
by Bruce Emery
In the First Approach, we see how major and minor chords are
grouped into keys (chord families) according to the 1 - 4 - 5 and
C-A-G-E-D Systems, with examples from popular music. Topics include the
Big Fifteen chords, using the capo, finding the starting note, tuning,
the Rhythm Changes and secondary dominant chords.In the Second Approach,
we start over from the beginning and fill in the details of how to use
Major Scales to generate the five C-A-G-E-D chord families and how all
12 key are related through the Circle of Fifths, the cosmic nutshell of
the entire musical universe. Topics include transposing from key to key,
dominant seventh chords, triad spellings, the jazz turnaround, back
cycling through the Circle, and relative minor keys. Plenty of
examples.The First ApproachNotes and pitchesThe layout of the
notesTuning the guitarChords and chord qualityThe Big Fifteen
chordsPlaying in different keysThe 1-4-5 systemC-A-G-E-D examplesChord
FamiliesThe 1 and 5 chordsSongs in different keysThe 1, 4 and 5 chords
Songs in different keys"Silent Night" in all 5 keysChoosing the right
keyUsing the capoQuiz time for the 1-4-5's Finding the starting
noteAdding the Minor chordsSongs in the Keys of G and C"Rhythm Changes"
Secondary Dominants Bunches of useful chords (A-G)The Second ApproachThe
Chromatic scaleLayout on the neckThe Major scaleThe Key of CScale
degrees and other keysThe Key of GWorksheet for Major scalesTraveling by
FifthsMajor scale summaryThe flat keysThe fretboard and the
keyboardMajor scale exercisesBack to Chord FamiliesThe C Harmonized
Diatonic scaleMajor chords versus Minor chordsFour combinations of
Thirds OtherChord FamiliesWorksheets for Chord FamiliesC-A-G-E-D Chord
Family summary Example: "Morning Has Broken"Full Chord Family
summaryTransposition chartDetails of the 1-4-5 relationshipThe Dominant
7th chordOverlapping Chord FamiliesChord substitutionsTriad spellingsMy
BioThe Circle of FifthsMore on Secondary DominantsExamples in the Key of
CDown by a 5th = up by a 4thBackcycling through all the keysC-A-G-E-D
Chord Family examplesMixing in the Minor chordsThe Jazz
Turnaround"Morning Has Broken" againYuletide Backcycling in a the
C-A-G-E-D keys Starting notesShortcuts in terminologyThe 4th of the
4thMajor 7th and Minor 7th chordsMinor keysC Major versus A MinorThree
kinds of Minor scalesCarols in the Keys of Am, Dm, and EmAppendix 1: Why
the number "five"?Appendix 2: Key signaturesVolume One in a nutshellOne
last quiz...