Guitar Lesson: A Guide for Beginner - More Major Chords

Home  ·  Guitar Gear  ·  Guitar Lessons  ·  Guitar Tab  ·  Basics  ·  Books  ·  Videos  ·  Software  ·  Articles  ·  News  ·  Links
WholeNote.com
Easily the best guitar site on the Web!

Free Newsletter
Specials on guitar gear, sheet music, videos, and more!

Bookmark Us
Hit Control-D or click above to make us your home page!
-- Sponsored By --
ActiveMusician.com
* Guitar Specials *
Hush Noise Gate
Rocktron Stomp Box
Portable Amp
Pignose Original
M-Audio Fast Track
USB Audio Interface
Rolling Stones
Guitar Style - Book/CD
101 Rock Licks
Licks you need to know
Wes Montgomery
Technique, Transcripts
Whammy & Bending
Instructional Video
50 Jazz Licks
Guitar Video
B.B. King
iSong CD-ROM
DART Karaoke
Create CD+G Discs!
A Guide for Beginner - More Major Chords
by Christopher Sung

Take The Full Interactive Lesson at WholeNote.com

• Return to Lesson Directory
• Email this lesson to a friend

Pages: 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10

The goal of this lesson is to enable you to play all of the major chords. If you took my "A Guide for Beginners - Major Chords", you should be familiar with the C, A, G, E, and D major chords. These chords used open strings. Unfortunately, those chords are really the only major chords that you can play using open strings. From here on in, we'll have to use barre chords. What the hell is a barre chord? Well, you'll learn that in page 2.

I don't expect you to be able to play the example below, but this exercise is the eventual goal of this lesson - to be able to play all of the major chords. One great way to learn a chord (such as a major chord) in all keys is to play a chord and then play the same chord but up 5 frets, and then continuing on. For example, if you play an E chord like in measure 1, if you go up 5 frets, the root note is A, so you play an A chord. If you go up 5 frets from there, you get D, and so on. Thus, the chords to play for this exercise are:

E · A · D · G · C · F · Bb · Eb · Ab · C# · F# · B

After you get to the end, you will have played every single possible major chord. Also note that in the exercise below, the first 5 chords use open strings - after that you have to start barring with your first finger. More on that in the next page.


Play The Musical Example • Sound Problems?

Pages: 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10


Email this lesson to a friend
ActiveBass.com - The On-Line Bass Community

© 2001-2008 eTonal Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.  Thanks for visiting ActiveGuitar.com. Check out ActiveMusician.com for guitars, amps, and effects, bass guitars, amps, and effects, music recording and pro audio equipment, sheet music, tablature and music books , music videos and music lesson videos, music software and recording software and finale-software.com as well.