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A music education system applied to guitar Tom Benjamin, PhD This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/ Benefits of this method: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Play by ear Plays with other instruments like recorder, harmonica Start with one finger Add new fingers and chords at your own pace Recognise and play famous songs Up and running within the first lesson Cautions: 1. Modern songs are copyright, so you’d have to obtain these separately 2. We start with famous old songs because they’re easy and free of copyright 3. Midi rather than .mp3 for smaller, quicker download 4. Ersatz chord names are approximate, so don’t trust them for music class assignments How it works: 1. Adapt the music to the player, rather than viceversa 2. Play by ear rather than by chord or note names 3. Restricted alternatives –ie- “sing any key as long as it’s D” 4. Drone, ersatz or pseudo-chords instead of more difficult full or bar chords –ie- Cmaj9 instead of C 5. Five simple ‘shapes’ and a few major chords –ieonly about nine items to memorize 6. Familiar chord patterns easy to predict by ear (blues, TinPan Alley, ballads, folk, rock, R&B .. ) 7. Learn shapes and sounds to find the chord by ear rather than trying to memorize chord lists One-finger Some folk songs require a mere two chords. If the open guitar sound is allowed to play one of the chords (G or D), moving one finger up & down creates the next chord (either D or E minor). Most of the notes don’t change, hence act as drones as with dulcimer or bagpipe. These special one-finger guitar chords require the accompanist (either musician or software) to modify the traditional chords slightly so that, for example: •G is played as A11/G or as G69/E •D is played as D2 •E minor is played as Em7 These special chords can have more than one drone sound to the ear so that we may regard the same open chord as either A11/G or D69sus4, depending on how we intend the ear to perceive it as a G or D sound in the context of the song. Open: ‘easy G chord’ D (used as Chord A11/G) (chord D2 or Dadd9 6th ) Many songs can be played just by lifting this one note on and off. The note changes from G (open) to D (down), switching the chord between A11/G and D2. Playing with other instruments Open: ‘easy G chord’ D (used as Chord A11/G) (chord D2 or Dadd9 6th ) As with guitar, moving one finger on a Keyboard switches chords (from note G to A below). Any green keys below can be safely played along with guitar as they correspond to the open strings of standard guitar tuning. This is how these chords look on a piano keyboard or xylophone: Open: ‘easy D chord’ E minor (used as Dsus*) (Em7 ) 2-chord songs can also be played in a minor key. The open chord has a number of sounds and is used here as the D (Dsus*). The finger now takes the Em7 position, so the two chords are now D (Dsus*) and Em (Em7). *The full name of the open chord as used here is D69sus4 More One-finger Chords Most people could start with simple 3-finger chords. But the one-finger versions allow us to concentrate on timing, listening to subtle differences in tone, and practice in following a predictable pattern such as blues or ballad. The chords produce a nice sound as only one string is muffled and the rest are left open. But the training purpose is to make the fret board (left hand) part easy so we can train the ear and the strumming hand. Finger positions on fretboard Each of the white spots is a position that creates a onefinger chord. This is a very easy set of positions to learn. Finger positions for one-finger chords Because of the way the standard guitar is tuned they lie along a crooked path. The pattern is obvious, easy to memorize, and easy to feel on the fretboard without even looking at it. A11/G G C (G6/9) (CMaj9) (G/E) Em7 A7 D (A7sus2) (D2 ) One-finger pseudo-chords (full names of the chords in parentheses) D11 or C69 Strumming Am7 F# Music is written in terms of notes and chords as at right. Instead, to make it easier for you, we write out just the general chord name and how many times you strum that chord in the song, as below: GGGG | GGGG | GGGG|GGGG CCCC |CCCC GGGG|GGGG DDDD | CCCC | GGGG|GGGG In words this would be: “strum G chord sixteen times then C eight times, D four times, C four times, and end with eight strums of the G chord.” One-finger blues To plays the blues pattern only requires the three finger positions at right. Below is the order in which they are strummed: GGGG | GGGG | GGGG|GGGG CCCC |CCCC GGGG|GGGG DDDD | CCCC | GGGG|GGGG G C D Alternate finger position The C chord can be played in more than one way. This version gives a higher pitch and is easier to switch between D and C GGGG | GGGG | GGGG|GGGG CCCC |CCCC GGGG|GGGG DDDD | CCCC | GGGG|GGGG G C D G (G6/9) C (CMaj9) D (D2 ) One-finger three-chord Blues The above notes in the following sequence give a variant of the ‘blues progression’ common to pop songs. (Each letter = one strum): GGGG | GGGG | GGGG|GGGG CCCC |CCCC GGGG|GGGG DDDD | CCCC | GGGG|GGGG Click to listen (played twice) To play along with a full instrumental midi version (3 times) click below: G (G6/9) C (CMaj9) D (D2 ) Practice the One-finger Blues The sequence to strum is below: GGGG | GGGG | GGGG|GGGG CCCC |CCCC GGGG|GGGG DDDD | CCCC | GGGG|GGGG To play along with a midi version of the guitar chords click below: G (G6/9) C (CMaj9) Em (Em7) One-finger Ballad Adding a few more chords allows a number of famous tunes and ‘standards’ to be approximated. A7 D ( A7sus2) (D2 ) D11 Summary chart to print out Summary chart with optional chord positions An example sequence of one-finger chords The full 1-finger chord system C G This six chords at right are the most relevant one-finger chords. The full names of chords in parentheses can be substituted in digital compositions so that other instruments can play along with little dischord. Em (CMaj9) (G69) (Em7) A7 D D11 ( A7sus2) (D2 ) (also C69) G13 B Bb Gb Db G (Fmaj9b5) (Bm11) (Bbmaj7b5) (Gbm9) (Dbm9b5) (G69) Less-commonly used chords Summary: One-finger Chords • These chords produce a nice sound. But their purpose is to make it easy to concentrate on when to change chords. • In the 3-finger chord sets to follow, the one-finger versions can be substituted at any time if you get lost or want to change chords very quickly in a fast song. • When you later learn 3-finger and full chords you can substitute them and play the songs used for the onefinger versions. In a musical group a combination of chords done well can give a full and interesting sound. Songs for One-Finger chords •Major: G and D •Buffalo Gals •Little Liza Jane •Shoo Fly Don't Bother Me •Skip To My Lou •Grand Texas (Jambalaya) •Polly wolly Doodle •Darling Corey •Banana Boat Song •Hot Time in the Old Town •Long, Long Ago •Get Along Little Dogies •Down in the Valley •Farmer in the Dell •Go Tell Aunt Rhody •Merrily we Roll Along •Row Row Row your Boat •Tom Dooley •He’s Got the Whole World •Ezekial Saw the Wheel •Old Paint •London Bridge •Jacob’s Ladder •Minor: D and Em •Shady Grove •What Should we do with the Drunken Sailor •Wade In the Water •Haul Away •Joshua fit the Battle of Jericho •900 Miles Below is a practice sample of famous songs that can be played with two chords: Major: G and D •Little Liza Jane •Skip To My Lou •Grand Texas (Jambalaya) •Polly wolly Doodle Minor: D and Em To play along with a midi version of some of these songs click on the icons at left : •Shady Grove •Down in the Valley •Wade In the Water And these are merely the ones out of copyright. There are many more modern 2-chord songs copyrighted.