T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2565.1 | Hey! I know that feeling!!! | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Fri Aug 07 1992 09:00 | 45 |
|
I have been hackin' away at an acoustic 6 string for awhile
now. Just recently it has been collecting dust as I have been
beating up the 12 string. The 12 string laughs at me if I
even think of a barre chord. What I have been able to do is
to voice them at either 3 or four strings, but never a barre.
With the 12 it sounds rich enough. When I try the same with the
6 string acoustic, it sounds like crap. Can't get the full barre to
ring true, not rich sounding either.
Grab the electric and things begin to work with funcky, abnormal,
where in hell did *THIS* ever come from - chords. (Though not very
well since all my time was spent with the acoustics.)
Add to this the acoustics that I have been playing are beaters
and the action is not very good at all. So I tend to play to, ah, err,
"hard"? When I plug in, the electric doesn't want me to force
things, it wants me to be a little more subtle. (Or maybe ALOT more
subtle.) So I have never liked playing the electric in the past.
But I think most of my problems are going away soon. 8^)
I am close to buying an amp. Most of my home time will be
pluged in and the acoustics will be treated as they are suppose to be
treated - beaters from hell. ('cept the Guild which has a very nice
action, but I never play it. Duuuuh.) My goals are to learn this
electric thang and be as comfortable plugged in as I am with the
acoustics. Bottom line is I think the electric will open up new
horizons for me. Tone and neck_savvy! (Which the acoustics just
wouldn't allow - 'least for me in the past.) Add to this I'll drag
out the Guild and strickly play *that* in the house, and things should
get better.
To me, what you described, is what I have experianced from playing
acoustic too much. But what the hell do I know. You've been playing
for twenty years. Me, only two - and I still stink.
Your note just struck a chord with me.
Get it! WAAAaaaaaagagagagagagaga. I crack myself up.
Rick.
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2565.2 | too many notes | DEMING::CLARK | Wheels of Confusion | Fri Aug 07 1992 09:24 | 17 |
| Barre chords! I haven't played one in 6 or 7 years! Learn to
play less dense chord inversions further up the neck; to me they
sound a lot better. For example, play the following D and G chords
in place of 10th position D and G barre chords:
D G
x x x x x x
| | | | | | | | | | | |
7th 1 1 1 1
fret| | | | | | | | | | | |
2
| | | | | | | | | | | |
3
| | | | | | | | | | | |
I guess bare chords sound better if you're doing Won't Be Fooled
Again or some Ramones tune.
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2565.3 | bass-icly | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | | Fri Aug 07 1992 09:59 | 12 |
|
Addressing .0's point about figuring out chords, I see it as
it's easier because you're hearing it thru the bass notes of
the barre chords. I always hear chord progressions by going
off the bass player. Once you have the 'bass'(ic) notes,
determining whether it's minor, 7th, etc... is easy.
I'd even use just the low E and A strings to start.
Tom
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2565.4 | Chord? What's a chord? | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Some dance to remember... | Fri Aug 07 1992 10:41 | 8 |
| I agree with Tom in .3; I think one of the best ways to learn about the
relationships among chords, from a practical point of view, is to play
bass. It's the same sort of thing as .0 says: the chord "goes up", the
fret "goes up (or across by a known amount)". You start to see
patterns in the songs and they start to get organized in your mind.
Especially if they're Chuck Berry songs, y'know?
Dave
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2565.5 | Hey Dave,.. what yo got against chords anyway? | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:07 | 21 |
| re Dave Clark
How can you play for 6 or 7 years and not play a barre chord?
I guess you only like to do leads....so what do you do if somebody
else ios playing lead? Stop playing? Play louder?
Anyway,. that D chord you tabed out is a barre...FWIW
The idea that barre chords only sound good for Ramones toonz
is pretty ,. um,.. well its a pretty narrow minded viewpoint.
For those of you who may be discouraged from learning barre chords
based on what Dave said there,.. I'd say ignore it and learn them...
Remember ,.. there are two rules
1) Learn everything
2) Forget it all and PLAY!
/Cat
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2565.6 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Don't fear, Love will make us strong | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:30 | 4 |
| Barre chords area little "big" for most ensebles ... you end up
stepping on either the pianist's or bassist's toes with your voicings!
I've turned into a 3-4 string kind of guy when it comes to chords.
Sounds better with distortion, too!
|
2565.7 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | HELP-I'm white and cant get down! | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:47 | 5 |
| You know, now that I think about it .... I rarely use barre chords
either. Not even on fast blues boogie stuff, 4 strings tops ...
Jerry
|
2565.8 | Hmmm,..... | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:55 | 12 |
| are we defining "barre" here the same?
I call any chord with any two strings fretted by the same finger
a barre...
Hence many three/four string chords are "barre"d to my definition...
If you guys are saying a baree is only a barre if you barre across
the whole neck,, then I agree,. rarely use those myself...
/?
|
2565.9 | lost... | SHARE::COOK | Confusion?... I don't get it. | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:06 | 6 |
| can someone give a few examples of barre chords, so that I know
A) what everyone considers a barre chord, and
B) what the h*ll I've been playing!
8^)
Chad_the_Confused
|
2565.10 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Don't fear, Love will make us strong | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:14 | 6 |
| BARRE CHORD #1 BARRE CHORD #2
=========== ===========
O-------O-O F7 | O---O---O Bb7
| | | O | | | | | | | |
| O O | | | | | O | O |
|
2565.11 | long time habit......use them with versatility! | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Ya lop eared varmint! | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:18 | 21 |
| I use those guys all the time....when appropriate. There are just some
styles/tunes that call for it....many Classic Rock type tunes for
example...however, I don't always play ALL the strings/notes that I'm
fingering. I may play a 6 string barre chord and just use the last two
strings to play a 'power chord', or I'll finger a 6 string barre chord,
and just play the first two strings.....for me it's a habit and many
times a shortcut to play a voiceing that doesn't necessarily use all
the strings mee fingers press on......I have developed (out of
laziness, probably) the ability to form the barre chords, and only let
the desired notes ring, while I deaden the others.....old habit, FWIW.
I also learned to play all the 'regular' chords in barre format (maj,
maj6, maj7, min, min7, 9th, 7th, 6th, etc...); Most frequently, I tend to
use the following open chord formats as barre chords by playing the open
chord format with my 'other' 3 fingers, and then 'barre-ing' with my index
finger as I climb the neck....E, Em, Em7, A, Am, Am7, Amaj7, C, Cmaj7.
FWIW,
Steve
Dawg
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2565.12 | :-) | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Some dance to remember... | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:24 | 6 |
| re: .10
Geez, Buck, I know I'm only a bass player, but isn't your F7 really an
F?
Dave
|
2565.13 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Don't fear, Love will make us strong | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:32 | 4 |
| Yeah yeah...It's a F (major).
Braid_Dead Buck
|
2565.14 | | DEMING::CLARK | Wheels of Confusion | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:50 | 13 |
| re: slash-mon
I play chords on 3-4 strings. What I think of as Barre chords are those
ones where you lay your index finger across all 6 strings and configure
your other fingers to make up the rest of the chord. I remember when
I'd been playing a few months I went up the street to hear the local
garage band practice/get some advice and they told me I needed to learn
barre chords to learn rock and roll. So I learned them (hard on a $29
acoustic) and went through that whole phase. But it's so hard to switch
from having your fingers all committed like that to doing a little
fill or something.
- Dave
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2565.15 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Don't let it start! | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:53 | 6 |
|
As a rank beginner I'd have to say I'd be lost without my barre chords.
As a matter of fact, it was shortly after I learned them that I
considered myself over the beginner's hump. That is, it was further
than I had ever progressed before (quit at least twice before) and I
really felt like I had moved forward.
|
2565.16 | Is this a barre? or a bar? Good,. I need a beer anyway | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:56 | 17 |
| OK,..
Thats where the misunderstanding comes from
FWIW,.. I still think every student can benefit from learning
all the barre chords,.. even if in the end they don't use them
directly for the style/songs they play.
As far as playing a barre across all 6 strings,.. then Buck's
notion of crowding the bass player or keys player comes into
play if your in the ensemble situation,....
But for you solo acoustic types,... I say,.. strain those index fingers
harder!!!! :-)
/Bill
|
2565.18 | and now for something completely different | DEMING::CLARK | Wheels of Confusion | Fri Aug 07 1992 15:34 | 3 |
| oooh, 'e's playing a Grande Barre chord; pardon me while I play the
Graaaahnd Piaaaaahno!
|
2565.19 | barre none | RANGER::WEBER | | Fri Aug 07 1992 15:50 | 39 |
| The term "Barre chord" generally implies the use of a Grande Barre: a
six-string chord with the index finger laid straight across the neck.
Many chords can be fingered with partial barres, but they aren't called
barre chords.
Barre chords are useful in some forms of music, but tend to be shunned
in others. Rock, Country, Pop & Blues use them, Jazz, Folk & Classical
generally don't. All guitarists should learn them and then promptly
stop using them :-).
The good thing about barre chords is that they make it easy to
transpose basic chord forms up and down the neck. The bad things are
that they have weak voicings and produce poor voice leading. Moving
parallel intervals don't make for interesting chord progressions. This
is a virtue for some forms of rock and pop, but would quickly get you
kicked out of the rhythm slot in a big band. The weak voicings come
from having duplicated intervals that water down the sound. No piano
player would play an F Major triad with three f's and two c's, but
guitarists do it all the time and think they're hot s(tuff). Freddie
Green, the best rhythm guitarist who ever lived, almost never used
anything but three and four string chords to provide the Basie band
with the best foundation possible.
For an example, try playing F Gm7 Gm7 first with barre chords, then
with four-string chords using the 6, 4, 3, & 2 strings. Even though the
voice leading is similar, the latter progression is a lot more solid.
This style of voicing also makes it much easier to provide harmonic
variety--this progression could easily be changed to F Ma7 Gm7 Am7 Am6
D9 D9b5 or any similar variation with almost no effort.
A versatile rhythm player should be able to play any form of any chord
anywhere on the neck, use barre chords when they're called for and use
other forms when they're not. Many players learn open chords first and
then think they have arrived when they learn barre chords. They
haven't--there is a whole world of movable three and four string chords that
bring rhythm guitar playing to completely different level.
Danny W.
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2565.20 | | GJO001::REITER | | Sat Aug 08 1992 18:37 | 10 |
| This is a very interesting string and I have learned a lot.
I think .19 sums it up the best: open --> barre --> partials for
chord voicings as the guitarist progresses, never wholly abandoning
'earlier' voicings.
In answer to .0, yes, knowing barre chords at this point in your
'training' should make it more intuitive (easier) to figure out songs
and play by ear.
\Gary
|
2565.21 | What about playing with a pick? | CHEFS::BRIGGSR | Four Flat Tyres on a Muddy Road | Mon Aug 10 1992 05:02 | 17 |
| Well, this certainly generated some discussion. A few points to add to
my base note.
As someone mentioned pop/rock songs played using barre chords tend to
have a physical pattern associated with the chord progressions which
makes them easier to remember. Another useful facet.
Now to 3/4 string 'barre' chords or, for want of a better phrase,
'chords played up the next'!. This type of playing seems fine for
finger style. In fact I play classical sometimes and this, in fact, is
all I play. However when playing electric and usually on my steel
acoustic I play with a pick 'by default'. Can you effectively play 3/4
string chords with a pick?
An exponent of this type of playing seems to me to be Mark Knopfler who
I have never seen use a pick.
Richard
|
2565.22 | Ditto what Buck said | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | db | Mon Aug 10 1992 08:30 | 47 |
| re: .6 (Buck)
> Barre chords area little "big" for most ensebles ... you end up
> stepping on either the pianist's or bassist's toes with your voicings!
Amen.
The mark of a "garage band" is two guitarists playing barre chords.
One of the things I learned as a keyboard player is that one of the
most important things that separates tight sounding bands from garage bands
is the voicings you choose for chords.
It really boils right back down to whether you listen to just yourself,
or the band as a whole.
Bar chords sound great when your playing in your room by yourself
because they fill a lot of space. When you're playing with a band,
particular bands with other guitarists or keyboards, there's much less
space and if everyone is playing "full" chord voicings, it just
sounds muffled.
The guitar players I have played with are used to me asking them to play
very "open" voicings (wide intervals). My ears also seem to have a
fixation on the third. I often ask guitarists to either leave
out the third, or play it on top.
As a guitar player, I also know that the less notes you use in a chord,
the more effective they are and the better they sound. Perhaps its
the same sorta thing as the classic "how many notes do you play" in
a solo.
BTW, you want a real lesson in how cool 3-note chord voicings can
sound, listen to Steve Morse:
o "Take it Off the Top"
o "Kat Food"
o "Broad Street Strut"
Geez, you probably can't put on two tunes in a row and hear some neat
3-note voicings that sorta "fool" your ear into thinking it's something
more complicated than it is.
In fact, I think he did a column in Guitar Player magazine very
recently that touched on this topic.
db
|
2565.23 | The bass player would kill me if I stepped on him | LUNER::KELLYJ | Think for yourself | Mon Aug 10 1992 08:31 | 10 |
| Yup, a great string...
re -.1: I play those three and and four note shapes using a pick,
either by using an abbreviated stroke so that I don't cover all six
strings, or, more commonly, by using the pick in conjunction with my
other fingers to play chords.
re Danny W. and Freddie Green: Definitely agree the best rhythm player
ever. I heard a saying that if they uprooted the tree of jazz, they'd
find Freddie Green at the roots.
|
2565.24 | where to go from barre chords | SMURF::BENNETT | Wearin' out things that nobody wears | Mon Aug 10 1992 11:09 | 55 |
|
One way of maneuvering with 4-string voicings that I've been
trying to nail down lately is connected to the symetries and
movability of diminished chord forms. Diminished chords repeat
every third fret. Take this one:
EADGBE
||||||
||x|x|
|||x|x
Since every note of a diminished chord is a root, it's these chords:
E dim, Bb dim, Db dim, G dim
Move it up 3 frets and it's the same 4 chords.
So what? Here's what - another chord composed of all minor 3rds
is a 7b9 without the root. So the chord above is also these
chords:
Eb7b9, A7b9, C7b9, Gb7b9
Move it up 3 frets and it's the same 4. chords. Knowing this, there
are lots of 4 chord voicings that can be derived. Drop any note in
the chord by 1/2 tone and get 4 dom7 voicings:
EADGBE EADGBE EADGBE EADGBE
||x||| |||||| ||||x| ||||||
||||x| ||xxx| ||x||| ||x|xx
|||x|x |||||x |||x|x |||x||
Eb7 A7 C7 Gb7
And derive anything else you want - take 3 down 1/2 step for
minor 7 voicings, raise 7 1/2 step for major 7 voicings.
This principle can be applied mechanically across a set of
"string groups" to provide a large chordal vocabulary. The
examples shown above work with string group 4,3,2,1. Here's
a set of string groups to poke around with:
5,3,2,1 5,4,2,1 5,4,3,1 5,4,3,2
EAxGBE EADxBE EADGxE EADGBE
|||||| |||||| |||||| ||||||
|||x|x |||||| ||x||| |||x||
|x|||| |x|||| |||x|x |x||||
||||x| ||x|x| |x|||| ||x|x|
|||||| |||||x |||||| ||||||
(hmmmm)
And on to 6,4,3,2 etc. Remember that all of these forms are
movable.
And there's always more.....
|
2565.25 | un-barre chords | RANGER::WEBER | | Mon Aug 10 1992 16:26 | 47 |
| Most movable chord forms can be played either with a pick or finger
style: using a pick requires that you be proficient in damping unused
strings. A variety of techniques are used, depending on which strings
are used. The easiest are played on the 3, 4 or 5 highest or lowest
strings--these merely require skipping the unused string. The others
have some combination of interior strings that will need to be damped
with some portion of an adjacent finger.
There are many useful 6 string chords that don't use a grande barre. I
often use them for intros and endings--they include voicings of Ma7s,
11ths, 13ths, 6/9s and various alterations of these chords. Many of
them appear to be barre chords but are not, since the index finger is
generally only sounding one note: for example, a first position
FMa7spelled F C F A E A.
If I am working without a keyboard player, I rely mainly on chords that
use the 6 4 3 2 or 5 4 3 2 strings. With a keyboard, I'll put more
emphasis on using the upper 4, and play chord fragments when possible.
Good examples of outstanding comping on the upper 4 abound on Wes
Montgomery's records--he was a master of using 4-string m6 and m7
chords to add interest to an otherwise static progression.
A Jerry Hahn album from the '70's (Moses?) has a short section of a
jazz blues done with one chord change per beat done in 3 & 4 note
chords. GP and downbeat magazine were inundated with letters from
amazed guitarists looking for transcriptions. Strangely enough, one of
the early Mel Bay books has this style completely documented, since
this was a common technique in the '40's and '50's, but to many
guitarists who learned during the '60's, it was something new and
startling.
db's comment about open voicings is interesting. Progressions using
close voicings are very difficult to play fluently on the guitar
because of the long stretches involved. Many guitarists use such chords
only for color, or rely on open strings or alternate tunings for
progressions. One guitarist who developed a unique style of closed
chord playing is Johnny Smith, whose stunning 1952 rendition of
"Moonlight In Vermont" is still the standard to which all such playing
should be compared. Johnny's voicing of a C6, spelled C E G A starting
at the 4th string and ending on the 1st is not easy to play by itself,
no less integrating it smoothly into a progression of similarly voiced
chords. Smith developed this technique so he could more closely emulate
the voicings of piano players.
Danny W.
|
2565.26 | Chord creation? | SHARE::COOK | Confusion?... I don't get it. | Tue Aug 11 1992 07:17 | 8 |
| Just curious, but how does one *make* a chord? For instance, a C chord
has a C, E, G, C, E in it. How did *they*(?) get the idea to put the
other notes in it? Or, are the major chords all made up of root, 3d,
5th, octave, etc? This is one thing that's always gone way over my
head... So, if there's any little equation for chords, I'd like to
know!
Chad
|
2565.27 | | KERNEL::FLOWERS | Run speed = 94bpm, Target = 140 | Tue Aug 11 1992 08:30 | 15 |
|
To make a MAJOR chord you need to use the Root, the 3rd and the 5th
notes out of the major scale (what scale will depend on what chord,
ie C major scale for the chord C major..or C, E major scale for
an E major chord)
In fact all chords are built up using this idea...a minor chord
has a b3rd (flattened third) a 7th uses the b7th, a major 7 would use
the 7th....there are lots of books available that go into this in some
detail...I'd recommend the guitar handbook by Ralph Denyer. It is handy
to learn this stuff....that way if you get stuck and don't know a chord
you can always work it out...
J
|
2565.28 | A great way to learn.... | SMURF::BENNETT | Wearin' out things that nobody wears | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:29 | 9 |
|
Danny - thanks for the pointers...
Chad -About chord construction - get a copy of
"Scales, Intervals, Keys, Triads, Rhythm, and Meter" by
Conley and Clough. Published in the US by WW Norton. It's a
programmed learning text on music theory that'll get you
literate mighty fast.
|
2565.29 | BWAAAAAAN-HONK! | SHARE::COOK | Confusion?... I don't get it. | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:39 | 7 |
| RE:-1
Thanks, I'm already music literate, 'cept for chords... (Played trumpet
for 8 years!) Never had a use for a chord- kinda tough to do on ye
mighty horn!
Chad
|
2565.30 | | SMURF::BENNETT | Wearin' out things that nobody wears | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:49 | 3 |
|
-.1 cool, you'll be able to skip the first 3 sections of the
book, it's just review of major & minor scales and key sigs.
|