Play electric guitar? Then you need to know all about power chords. Power chords are easy guitar chords to play and sound great with lots of distortion. Power chords are played in all types of rock music because they sound great on a overdriven guitar, whereas other chords can sound messy.
Power chords use just two notes, the root and 5th of the scale, the root note is marked by the square box.
G5 has these notes in: G, D
You can also play this chord with three notes, doubling the root note an octave higher.
- 1st Fret = F Power Chord
- 2st Fret = F#/Gb Power Chord
- 3rd Fret = G Power Chord
- 4th Fret = G#/Ab Power Chord
- 5th Fret = A Power Chord
- 6th Fret = A#/Bb Power Chord
- 7th Fret = B Power Chord
- 8th Fret = C Power Chord
- 9th Fret = C#/Db Power Chord
- 10th Fret = D Power Chord
- 11th Fret = D#/Eb Power Chord
- 12th Fret = E Power Chord
Here's the three note version of the power chord, with the root note on the 5th string giving us a D Power Chord:
- 1st Fret = A#/Bb Power Chord
- 2st Fret = B Power Chord
- 3rd Fret = C Power Chord
- 4th Fret = C#/Db Power Chord
- 5th Fret = D Power Chord
- 6th Fret = D#/Eb Power Chord
- 7th Fret = E Power Chord
- 8th Fret = F Power Chord
- 9th Fret = F#/Gb Power Chord
- 10th Fret = G Power Chord
- 11th Fret = G#/Ab Power Chord
- 12th Fret = A Power Chord
The two note power chord on the D and G strings of the guitar uses the same fingering, here with the root on the 3rd fret giving us an F power chord:
- 1st Fret = D#/Eb Power Chord
- 2st Fret = E Power Chord
- 3rd Fret = F Power Chord
- 4th Fret = F#/Gb Power Chord
- 5th Fret = G Power Chord
- 6th Fret = G#/Ab Power Chord
- 7th Fret = A Power Chord
- 8th Fret = A#/Bb Power Chord
- 9th Fret = B Power Chord
- 10th Fret = C Power Chord
- 11th Fret = C#/Db Power Chord
- 12th Fret = D Power Chord
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