CHNOPS
Loves amps
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2012
- Posts
- 7,497
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C major chord leaving the B-string open would be a C Maj 7. (To be a 9th, you'd need to add the note D.)
It is. In C, you could lift your second finger as well (or hammer on from open to second fret), leaving just the third playing the root. Strummed from there, you'd have a Major 9 (C, D, G, B, E).By bad. I get em confused sometimes. Either way cool mellow chord
It is. In C, you could lift your second finger as well (or hammer on from open to second fret), leaving just the third playing the root. Strummed from there, you'd have a Major 9 (C, D, G, B, E).
Idiots. Guitar players.It is. In C, you could lift your second finger as well (or hammer on from open to second fret), leaving just the third playing the root. Strummed from there, you'd have a Major 9 (C, D, G, B, E).
You might suck, but I'm sure you look cool rocking out!Oh, hell no. I was just borrowing that. Do you know how much brass instruments cost. Good god. Guitars are so much cheaper.
Hey, sweet cheeks. So good to see you posting around these parts. You know how much I suck at every instrument I play.
You put the energy out thereHoly shitballs. My pal I was just writing about? After eons of not playing together, she just texted me that we need to get together. That sorta freaks my shit out. Girl, are you a member here? Or did the universe send you that message? World = weird.
Is an add 2 (a term no one with training every uses) if its the second i.e voiced with the root and then next diatonic note, if you play it up an octave and a second ( a Ninth), or work with jazz players who never use "add-2," its called an add 9.Nope. Major 9 has a major 7. You're thinking of add-2.
Guitar players speak their own language. Its really confusing, because it uses the same words as English, but means something different in their heads.Idiots. Guitar players.
It's not the key, it's the mode.
And you wonder why we lose our patience with you?
Is an add 2 (a term no one with training every uses) if its the second i.e voiced with the root and then next diatonic note, if you play it up an octave and a second ( a Ninth), or work with jazz players who never use "add-2," its called an add 9.
Indeed. Do you know what you got wrong?You're the one who said I was wrong.