Special Issue No. 3 ·
"Secrets of Exciting Chords & Chord Progressions!"
 

     
 

This is the " Secrets of Exciting Chords & Chord Progressions!" newsletter that you (or someone using your E-mail address) signed up for when you visited our site. If you no longer want to receive these free weekly E-mail piano lessons, toggle down to the bottom of this E-mail and you'll see where you can take yourself off the list. We take your privacy (and ours) very seriously, so we don't want anyone receiving our stuff who doesn't want it! ('cause thousands really do!).
divider.gif (1021 bytes)

" Secrets of Exciting Piano Chords & Piano Chord Progressions!"

- Special Issue 3 -

      How To Become a "Chord Detective" and see through
all the notes into the order behind the written music so you can play any song using chord variations instead of just "as it is written" with no variety.

     If you can read music to some degree but don't "see through" the written music -- don't understand what you are seeing -- now you can put on your "chord glasses" that good chord detectives wear to see through all that mass of black printed notes on a white page of sheet music to quickly understand what chords are being used and the "family logic" behind it all.

     The "family logic" is this: In every key there are certain chords which are organic to that key -- "family members", so to speak. For example, in the key of F the 3 most used chords are F, Bb and C. In the key of G the most used chords are G, C, and D. In the key of Eb the most used chords are Eb, Ab, and Bb. Do you see a pattern here?

     Chords are based on scales, and the chords which are used the most in any key are built on the 1st degree of the scale, the 4th degree of the scale, and the 5th degree of the scale. They are identified by using the Roman numerals I, IV, and V.

     So the most used chords in any key are the I chord, the IV chord, and the V chord. They are the primary chords, and they are all major. They occur way more than other chords. The next most used chords are the ii chord, the vi chord, and the iii chord -- all minor chords.

     Just knowing these simple facts gives a musician a giant advantage when learning or playing a song. If he or she knows the most likely chords that are going to occur in a song, based on the key of the song, then they can scrape together other evidence quickly to build an air-tight case that they know the chords of that song.

     For example, let's take two musicians about to play from a piece of sheet music. Both read music, but only one knows chords and music theory. The first musician looks at the notes and sees a Bb in the bass clef as the first note, a Eb in the bass clef in the second measure, a Bb in the 3rd measure, an F in the fourth measure, and so on. He can play what he sees, but nothing else, because he doesn't grasp the fact that the first few measure have given away the fact that the primary chords have been outlined.

     The second musician looks at the same music, but with "X-ray eyes". He sees through the same notes into the chord structure behind the scenes.

     The first musician is tied to the written music and limited to the notes printed on the sheet music, while the second musician has the best of both worlds: he can read the music and play it as it is written, but he can also add chords and fills and come out with a much bigger, more interesting arrangement than the first musician.

     The benefits of becoming a chord detective are many:

  • It allows a musician to immediately identify what key a song is in...  

  • It allows a musician to know POSITIVELY which chords are most likely to occur in each song...

  • It allows a musician to look at the first measure and the last measure and immediately know the harmonic form of any song...

     Plus:

  • It works in any key -- major or minor...

  • It works with any kind of hymn or gospel song...

  • It works by releasing a musician from being "tied to the written music"...

  • It works by allowing a musician to add chords of his or her own..

  •      The bottom line is this: knowing chords and music theory allows a "chord detective" to develop "see through eyes" that immediately perceive the structure of a song and then allow that musician to use both the written score and any fillers or improvisations he or she desires to add to a song.

         Please go to www.pianolessonsbyvideo.com for more complete information.

     

    Music note divider

     

     

    Google
     
    Web PlayPiano.com
    PianoLessonsByVideo.com PianoPlaying.com

     

     

    Copyright Shinn Trading 1995-2008

    Back to Piano Lessons & Piano Chords

     

    Piano Chords ] Piano Playing ] Gospel Music ] Play Piano ] Keyboard Chord Chart ] Piano Runs & Fills ] Piano Playing By Ear ]  Piano Playing Without  Sheet Music ] Free Piano Lessons ] Piano Music Using Chords ] Piano Music By Ear ] Chord Progressions] Music-Piano ] Home Business in Music] Crash Course in Exciting Piano Playing] Improvising on the Piano ] Classical Piano for Beginners]

       This is the "Piano Chords & Progressions" e-course that you (or someone using your name) signed up for.  If you didn't sign up, then go to the bottom of this page and unsubscribe, because we only want people who LOVE this stuff to get it! Make sure this newsletter reaches you by calling your ISP and putting us on your "Mail I want to receive" list and put our address in your address box. Some SPAM filters actually stop this newsletter from being delivered, even though the person signed up for it and wants it! And if your SPAM filter "eats" it, there is nothing I can do about it. I can't resend it because that is all handled automatically by a 3rd party auto-responder. So make sure you get it by calling your ISP (Certain popular ISP's are particularly notorious about this, so if you have an e-mail account with one of them, please let them know you want this newsletter!)

    Disclaimer     Privacy Policy     Children Privacy Policy     Terms of Use