Hey!at
I am an intermediate player but i know very little about 7th chords or sus chords. I am trying to learn these but at first even 40 beats is very fast. Hard to catch...
Thanks.
Hey!at
I am an intermediate player but i know very little about 7th chords or sus chords. I am trying to learn these but at first even 40 beats is very fast. Hard to catch...
Thanks.
Have you tried looping a few measures to play repeatedly?
You could also easily write a sample chart to study the changes.
7th Chords - Example
You'll find that a dominant 7th (1,3,5,7b) isn't (usually) happy until it resolves to its 4th.
Where do you think a sus chord (1,4,5) wants to resolve? (Hint: look at the major triad in the chord above...)
Have fun!
)BOB
Thanks pdxdjazz. So , when you play a C7dominant , will it resolve to an F chord eventually?
I couldn't figure where a sus chord will resolve. Help me understand please.
I got another question. When i play using 2 handed piano schemes progressions are all the same. For example a D chord is shown as DAFAD at every song. But it should change right? Some songs should have different progressions. How do i do it? Is there a setting for that?
Often, but not always. Read about the circle of fifths.
http://www.music-theory-for-musician...of-fifths.html
A sus chord often wants to resolve to its major triad. Csus > C. Think Ahhhh-men.
The notes in a D chord are D, F#, A. (1,3,5) you can choose to play them in different inversions (the order may change) but as long as it's a D chord, that's what you get to work with.
)BOB
Last edited by pdxdjazz; 09-02-2015 at 12:28 PM.
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