Seventh
Chords
To understand this method of figuring out
seventh chords, you must have a basic knowledge of the degrees of the major
scale.
I will show you how to find every 7th chord you'll ever need in
three patterns and with four rules. Obviously, this will not show you every
voicing there is on guitar but it is a start if you really want to try it.
The Three Patterns Place your fingers
where the numbers are. The numbers represent the degree of that note.
(1=root note)
The Four Rules
All of the rules refer to the chord symbol
which is the expression used to name chords
- The 5th is natural unless you're told otherwise by the chord
symbol
- "7" means b7
- "maj7" means that the 7th is not flatted
- "min" (or "m") means to flat the 3rd
Examples
A7 7th is flatted |
A7b5 7th and 5th are flatted
|
Amin7 7th and 3rd are flatted
|
Amaj7 7th is natural (not
flatted) |
Am maj7 3rd is flatted, 7th is
natural |
Am maj7b5 3rd and 5th are flatted
7th is natural |
Note: When you see "aug" or "+" raise the
5th a half step
What you must do is adjust the patterns according
to chord symbol. Examples are shown below.
|