Chords Guitar - Google Blog Search

Chords Guitar - Google Blog Search


Ultimate <b>Guitar</b> Tabs & <b>Chords</b> v4.1.0 Full APK - Indexapk.net

Posted: 08 Aug 2015 03:24 AM PDT

Ultimate Guitar Tabs and Chords

Download app Ultimate Guitar Tabs and Chords v4.1.0 Full Apk latest is here

Ultimate Guitar Tabs & Chords is a mobile version of the world's largest catalog of guitar & ukulele chords, tabs and lyrics, available even offline. Learn how to play your favorite songs on acoustic, electric guitar or ukulele. Get over 800,000 tabs and free daily updates with recent hit songs! Learn how to play guitar from scratch or refresh your knowledge of the instrument with our interactive lessons (available as an in-app purchase).

App features:

  • Popular songs from latest releases
  • Guitar & ukulele chords, notes and scores for more than 400,000 songs
  • Chord diagrams with fingering. Each chord features multiple variations
  • Free daily updates
  • Оffline access to favorite tabs
  • Left-handed mode
  • Quick search by type, difficulty, tuning and rating
  • Autoscroll

Powerful upgrades (available as an in-app purchase):

  • 200,000 additional tabs with playback and multiple instruments
  • accurate tuner
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  • chord library with over 2 mln guitar chords
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Ultimate Guitar Tabs & Chords Screenshot:

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Extended <b>Chords</b> 9th 11th 13th for <b>Guitar</b> - GUITARHABITS

Posted: 08 Jul 2015 11:48 PM PDT

Bigstock photo
extended chords 9th, 11th, 13th for guitar

Extended chords are usually used in jazz music, but also in other styles like pop, blues and latin music to spice up chord progressions and add some nice flavor to the chords.

When I first learned the theory behind extended chords, it opened up a whole new world for me. All these mysterious chord names made finally sense.

I would use the chords for my own material, incorporate them into some of my favorite guitar songs and started learning some wicked jazz tunes.

Once you play around, experiment and incorporate these chords into your playing it will make guitar playing really fun and colorful.

If you're new to chord construction then first check out How to Use Chord Formulas and Their Benefits and How to Play The Most Common Types of 7th Chords. These posts will give you the basic chord theory you need.

Let's dive in…

Triads and 7th Chords
Extended chords are the 9th, 11th and 13th chords.

To understand the chord structure of extended chords we must first know the major and minor triad and three types of seventh chords. We use the "C" chord as an example to show the chord names.

The major chord consists of the root, third and fifth note of the major scale (1-3-5) = C
The minor chord consists of the root, flatted third and the fifth (1-b3-5) = Cm
The dominant 7th chord consists of the root, third, fifth and flatted seventh (1-3-5-b7) = C7
The minor 7th chord consists of the root, flat third, fifth and flat seventh (1-b3-5-b7) = Cm7
The major 7th chord consists of the root, third, fifth and seventh (1-3-5-7) = Cmaj7

As you can see chords are based on third intervals (1-3-5-7). To create the extended chord, we need to stack up another third interval.

9th Chords
For these three types of 7th chords there are also three types of 9th chords:
The dominant 9th, minor 9th and major 9th.

The dominant 9th chord consists of root, third, fifth, flatted seventh and ninth (1-3-5-b7-9) = C9
The minor 9th chord consists of root, flat third, fifth, flat seventh and ninth (1-b3-5-b7-9) = Cm9
The major 9th chord consists of the root, third, fifth, seventh and ninth (1-3-5-7-9) = Cmaj9

9th chords

Notes: Extended chords have many notes. The thing is you have to deal with only six strings and practical chord fingerings so here and there you are allowed to omit some of the notes. In this case you can leave out the 5th because it's the least important note. It doesn't effect the overal sound of the extended chord.

Extended chords are extensions of the 7th chord, therefor the (b)7th is always present in the extended chord. Also the 9th seems here pretty important since it's a 9th chord.

11th Chords
The three types of 11th chords are: dominant 11th, minor 11th and major 11th.

The dominant 11th chord: 1 – 3 – 5 – b7 – 9 – 11 = C11
The minor 11th chord: 1 – b3 – 5 – b7 – 9 – 11 = Cm11
The major 11th chord: 1 – 3 – 5 – 7 – 9 – 11 = Cmaj11

11th chords

Note: The major 3rd and the 4th (4th is the same as 11th) clash and create dissonance (which doesn't sound very pretty), therefor the third is often omitted in the C11 and Cmaj11 chord. Originally this would change the name of the chords. C11 becomes C9sus4. Cmaj11 becomes Cmaj9sus4. Still the chords are often notated as an 11th chord.

Also the 5th can be omitted. Leave in the (b)7th and the 11th.

13th Chords
The three types of 13th chords are: dominant 13th, minor 13th and major 13th.

The dominant 13th chord: 1 – 3 – 5 – b7 – 9 – 11 – 13 = C13
The minor 13th chord: 1 – b3 – 5 – b7 – 9 – 11 – 13 = Cm13
The major 13th chord: 1 – 3 – 5 – 7 – 9 – 11 – 13 = Cmaj13

13th chords

Note: The 5th, the 9th and 11th can be omitted. Leave in the (b)7th and 13th.

An extended chord doesn't change the quality of the chord it only adds more flavor to the overal sound.

Tip: All the extended chords shown above are closed chords and can be played in every key. The 1 is the root of the chord and determines the name of the chord. In the examples above the root note is "C". Move any of the chords up a half step and "C" becomes "C#", move up another half step and it becomes "D" and so on.

Assignments:

1 – Learn the extended chords in different keys.

2 – Experiment and substitute a dominant 9th chord for a dom7th chord when you play a song.

3 – Substitute a major 13th chord for a major 7th chord.

4 – Experiment using extended chords in songs.

5 – Memorize the extended chords in this post.

Have a great one!

Jazz <b>Guitar</b> Corner: Three Essential Jazz <b>Guitar Chord</b> Soloing Lines

Posted: 19 Jun 2015 01:48 PM PDT

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One of the most common roadblocks many jazz guitarists face is that after learning your essential chord shapes, how do you take those inversions and make them into cool-sounding jazz chord lines?

While learning chord shapes is important—since it builds an understanding of jazz harmony and the fretboard in your studies—studying classic jazz guitar chord lines is the next step in turning these chord shapes into music.

In this lesson you'll study three essential jazz guitar chord soloing lines that will bridge the gap between your study of chord shapes and applying those shapes to a real, musical situation.

The lines are written out in one key, so make sure to transpose them in your practice routine as well as work them at different tempos in your practice routine.

Once you can play these three lines from memory, in a number of keys, try writing out three chord lines of your own over the same progressions as you begin to create your own jazz guitar chord soloing phrases in the woodshed.

Jazz Guitar Chord Soloing Line 1

To begin your study of these three chord soloing lines, here is a phrase that is used to outline a turnaround progression in the key of G major. The line itself is pretty straight forward, but notice how the G#dim7 chord uses a few diatonic notes to run up the fretboard over that part of the tune.

When playing dim7 chords on the guitar, you can take any note in that chord shape and raise it by 2 frets to reach the next diatonic note over that chord. You can see this in action as the Ab moves to Bb and B moves to Db(C#) over the second half of the first bar in the line.

Jazz Guitar Chord Soloing Line 2

In this minor ii-V-I chord soloing line you will be using a number of different E7alt shapes as you navigate the chord changes. Notice how the E7 chord is in the second bar of the progression, but that the chord soloing line begins to outline that chord three beats earlier, in beat 2 of the first bar.

This is a common technique used in jazz guitar lines, where you are anticipating the next chord as you apply it to the previous chord in the progression.

Lastly, there is an F7#9 chord at the end of the first bar that adds a bit of tension as you move up and back by a half step from E7-F7-E7 in that part of the line. This type of chord line is often used to create tension, as the F7 is tense over the E7, which you then resolve when you bring the line back to the original chord, in this case E7alt.

Jazz Guitar Chord Soloing Line 3

Here's a ii-V-I chord line that move up and down the fretboard as you navigate the changes, Gm7-C7-Fmaj7. Notice the use of a triad pair over the Gm7 chord, where you are playing Bb and C triads over that chord.

When playing over m7 chords, you can use major triads from the bIII and IV of that underlying chord, which highlight the intervals b3-5-b7 and 11-6-R respectively. There's also a b9 used over the C7 chord that creates a bit of tension before resolving it down to an Fmaj7 chord to end the phrase in bar 3 of the line.

What do you think about these jazz guitar chord soloing lines? Share your thoughts in the COMMENTS section below.

Matt Warnock is the owner of mattwarnockguitar.com, a free website that provides hundreds of lessons and resources designed to help guitarists of all experience levels meet their practice and performance goals. Matt lives in the UK, where he is a senior lecturer at the Leeds College of Music and an examiner for the London College of Music (Registry of Guitar Tutors).


<b>Guitar</b> Passing <b>Chords</b> For Dummies | <b>Guitar</b> Music Theory

Posted: 11 Aug 2014 09:11 AM PDT

Passing Chords
To connect chords that are a whole step apart or more, composers often use passing chords, which use some of the pitches in between a key's chords. One example is a chromatic passing chord, which simply moves in half step motion between two chords as heard in "I'm a Man" by The Spencer Davis Group (G-F#-F-E).

Diminished Chords
Another type of passing chord is a diminished chord. Diminished chords sound very dissonant and unstable by themselves, almost unusable. But when placed between the right chords, they make complete sense. Just listen to "Friends in Low Places" by Garth Brooks for a good example. The verse uses the chords A-A#dim-Bm-E.

Guitar diminished passing chord

Diminished chords are typically used to create chromatic half-step movement between chords as shown here in this guitar tab example based on Garth Brooks' "Friends in Low Places."

Augmented Chords
Sometimes an augmented chord functions as a passing chord, bridging the gap between chords with chromatic half-step movement as heard in "Crying" by Roy Orbison. This song features the chord changes D-Daug-G-Gm-D-A7.

Guitar Theory
In music, it's important to not only learn the chords that belong to a key, but the different types of passing chords that can be played in between them. This free guitar lesson is based on Guitar Theory For Dummies Chapter 10. Learn more about the book and watch a video trailer at: http://www.guitar-music-theory.com/guitar-theory-for-dummies/

Free Guitar Lesson

Listen to this podcast episode to hear examples of guitar passing chords. Click on the link below to start the audio or go to the Guitar Theory podcast at iTunes.

Podcast Episode 31: Guitar Passing Chords For Dummies

Guitar Theory For Dummies

Guitar Theory For Dummies

This free guitar lesson is based on my book, Guitar Theory For Dummies, Chapter 10. Click the link to learn more about the book and watch a free video trailer.

Music Theory For Guitar
To learn more about music theory for guitar, including scales, chords, progressions, modes and more, read Guitar Theory For Dummies from Wiley Publishing or sign up for a free preview of Fretboard Theory.

Play Until Yer Fingers Bleed!
Mr. Desi Serna
Website: http://Guitar-Music-Theory.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/desiserna
Twitter: http://twitter.com/MrGuitarTheory
YouTube: http://youtube.com/GuitarMusicTheoryTab
Podcast: http://bit.ly/ac4cDk

Awaara <b>Guitar Chords</b> - Alone - Sqeets

Posted: 06 Jan 2015 03:55 AM PST

Intro:

[E]Phir se wahin dil le [F#]aaya mu[E]jhe
[E]Hai bas jahaan teri [F#]meri wafaa
[E]Kehta hai ye ishq [F#]ki raah se
[E]Phir ek dafaa hum [F#]guzar lein zara
[E]Paas laaya tere, [F#]yun sataaya mujhe
Phir [C#m]tere liye majbo[F#]or kiya, majbo[E]or kiya..

Chorus:

Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#]awaara [E]hua
Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#awaara [E]hua

Verse:

Kabhi [E]pehli barish min ye khwa[C#m]hishein jagayein
Kabhi [E]isme chal rahi dhad[C#m]kan ko badhayein
Fit[F#]rat se ye besabar bas [E]tujhko bulaaye
Do[F#]ori ka jo aalam ho to kho[E]ob rulaaye
[E]Phir kitni bhi koshish kar lu dil [F#]sambhal na paye

[E]Paas laaya tere, [F#]yun sataaya mujhe
Phir [C#m]tere liye majbo[F#]or kiya, majbo[E]or kiya..

Chorus:

Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#]awaara [E]hua
Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#awaara [E]hua

Verse:

Chal [E]phir unn galiyon me [C#m]hum phir kho jaayein
Jahaan [E]chalti thi mohabbat ki [C#m]taaza hawaayein
Wah[F#]an phir se ajnabi kyun [E]na ho jaayein
Phir [F#]se ek dooje ko aa [E]chal milwayein
[E]Tujhe milke aawargi ka [F#]mausam phir aye

[E]Paas laaya tere, [F#]yun sataaya mujhe
Phir [C#m]tere liye majbo[F#]or kiya, majbo[E]or kiya..

Chorus:

Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#]awaara [E]hua
Ho aawara aa[E]wara, awa[F#]ara awaara
Aaw[C#m]ara aawara, dil [F#awaara [E]hua..

<b>Guitar Chords</b> - Super Beginner Tips on Switching <b>Guitar</b> <b>...</b> - YouTube

Posted: 12 May 2015 08:49 AM PDT

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Published on May 12, 2015

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