Showing posts with label 7th. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7th. Show all posts

Saturday, February 22, 2014

D7 Guitar Chord

Today's Guitar Chord of the Day is D7. This chord is easy to play in open position and is used in thousands of songs. To remember this fingering you can think of it as a mirror image of a regular D major chord.
D7 Guitar Chord
D7th Guitar Chord

When playing this D7 Guitar Chord it's important not to play the bottom E string as this not is not in the chord.

D7 Guitar Chord

7th chords are constructed using these scale degrees: 1, 3, 5, b7
D7 uses these notes: D, F#, A, C

Here is another fingering of the D7 chord. This inversion is in 3rd position and is simply a C7 chord moved up two frets.

D7 guitar chord

D7 guitar chord
Be careful not to play either E string when playing this chord.

D7 guitar chord


Check back soon for another guitar chord of the day.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

E7 Guitar Chord

Today's Guitar Chord of The Day is E7 and we're trying out to different fingerings of E7 in open position. Our first E7 chord is an easy guitar chord to play. Start with an E major chord and remove your 3rd finger.
E7 Guitar Chord
E7 Guitar Chord tab


This lets the open D string ring.

E7 Guitar Chord fingering
E7 uses these notes: E, G#, B, D
7th chords use the notes from the major scale: 1, 3, 5, b7

Our second way of playing the E7 Guitar Chord in open position also starts with playing a regular E major chord. This time you add your little finger on the 3rd fret of the B string.
E7 Guitar Chord Box



Here is the fingering for this chord.
E7 Guitar Chord


Try using this chords in a Blues progression in A or E and tune back soon for another guitar chord of the day.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

G7 Guitar Chord

Today's Guitar Chord of the Day is G7. The G7 chord is a common chord in the key of C and is also used in Blues chord progressions.
The first fingering of this guitar chord is in open position. Note that it has one note different to a standard open G chord.
G7 Guitar Chord
G7 Guitar Chord

It's easy to play this chord with your first finger on the 1st fret of the E string, 2nd finger on the 2nd fret of the A string and 3rd finger on the 3rd fret of the bottom E string.

G dominant 7 Guitar Chord

7th chords use the following notes: 1, 3, 5, b7
G7 uses these notes: G, B, D, F

Add Guitar Chord Of The Day to your daily practice routine and tune in tomorrow for another Guitar Chord of the Day.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

A7 Guitar Chord

Today's Guitar Chord of the Day is A7. This open guitar chord is commonly used and is easy to play.
A7 Guitar Chord Box
A7 guitar chord


This fingering is very easy to play, starting with an open A major chord take off your middle finger and you have an A7 Guitar Chord:

A7 Guitar Chord

Here is another way to play an A7 chord in open position:
A7 Guitar Chord Box

A7 guitar chord

Play an open A major chord and add your little finger on the 3rd fret of the top E string.

A7 Guitar Chord
7th chords are very common in blues, A7 is also used in songs in the key of D major.

7th chords use these notes from the major scale: 1, 3, 5, b7
A7 uses these notes: A, C#, E, G

Check back soon for another guitar chord of the day. 

Friday, May 31, 2013

C7 Guitar Chord

Today's guitar chord of the day is C7, another beginner's guitar chord. This chord is easy to play: start with a regular open C major chord and add you little finger on the 3rd fret of the G string. Here is the C7 chord using a chord, standard notation and tab
C7 Guitar Chord
C7 guitar chord

7th chords are used lots in 12 bar blues progressions, in pop songs the C7 is usually followed by an F major chord.


C7 Guitar Chord

Check out other beginner guitar chords and tune back soon for another guitar chord of the day.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

B7 Guitar Chord | Beginners Guitar Chords

The B7 guitar chord is a really useful chord for beginners to learn. Played together with E Major and A Major chords it can be used to play countless songs from 50's rock 'n' roll, through to contemporary pop.
B7 Guitar Chord


To play this guitar chord shape, put your middle finger on the 2nd fret of the A string, 1st finger on the 1st fret of the D string. 3rd finger on the 2nd fret of the G string and your little finger on the 2nd fret of the top E String.
B7 guitar chord

The B7 chord uses the notes: B, D#, F# A

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Frank Gambale Magic Chords 4

Today's Guitar Chord of the Day continues our series looking at Frank Gambale's Magic Chords.
Frank Gambale Magic Chords

Here's the fingering for this guitar chord:
Frank Gambale Magic Chord


As with yesterday's inversion, today's Chord of the Day can be considered in many different ways.

C, D, G
Csus2 (1, 2, 5)
D11(b7, 1, 11)
Ebmajor 13 (13, 7, 3)
F69 (5, 6, 9)
Gsus4 (4, 5, 1)
Abmaj7#11 (3, #11, 7)
Am11 (b3, 11, b7)
Bb69 (9, 3, 6)

We can use our one Magic Chord in place of 8 different chords all with the same fingering in the same position. The chord can function as:

C, D, F, Bb and G dominant 7th chords
C, Eb, F, Bb, Ab, G major7th chords
C, A, D, G, F minor 7th chords

We've looked at using the Magic chord as major7 and minor7 chords, today we'll look at using the Magic Chord as a Dominant 7th chord.  For example, we could play this inversion in the following positions and it could function as a C7:

2nd position C13 (D, G, A, D)
5th position C11 (F, Bb, C, F)
7th position C9 (G, C, D, G)
9th position C69 (A, D, E, A)
12th position C11 (C, F, G, C)

Try playing through some songs you know and dropping in other Frank Gambale Magic Chords in place of major and minor inversions you might use and tune in tomorrow for another Guitar Chord of the Day.