Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
On guitar without capo I like F major and minor, and Bb Minor as they give a very different sound than just playing E or A with a capo on first fret
They aren't uncommon in any music with horn or woodwind players though.
Many guitarists are bewildered by them though.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
Auto-Bounce by Tom Salta
Dreamhost Web Hosting
When I was at a fairly formative part of my learning curve I spent quite a lot of time in a band with a female lead vocalist whose natural range centred around there - she usually wrote songs in "G" capo'd at the 4th fret or "Am" capo'd at the second, so I got very used to playing in those keys, in most cases specifically without a capo so I was forced into not duplicating her parts, which sounded much better.
But as a result of that and her occasional tendency to change the key - ie move her capo! - after the event, I pretty quickly learned to transpose and base a lot of my playing around barre and half-barre shapes, so I can now play in most keys tolerably easily.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson
F, Bb and Eb are my least favourite, which is a bummer for a guitarist in a Kate Bush tribute band.
I don't tend to use bar chords or a capo, it's all thumb over the neck and as many open strings as possible
When I work a song out I ignore the absolute pitch and just listen for open strings and familiar chord voicing's, then I can hear what's going on. The amount of people who couldn't figure out Brightside was amazing but I could hear the open E string adding the 2 / 9 so straight away you could tell he was playing it in D
C#m is the relative minor of Emaj so all the open strings are fair game except the G string, it's a great key for open inversions.
@viz What I don't like about Bb and Eb is the lack of open strings and available harmonics. These are the things that give you time to move position without any gaps, they essentially buy you time as a solo guitarist. For solo'ing over backing any key is cool but again, it's easier for country, Rockabilly and rock if you can use open strings as pedals, drones etc and some harmonics as seasoning
G Minor / B Flat is good too..
That is when using open strings though..
If using movable chords surely it's all as easy as each other...
You just need to know the Chord form and where the roots are..
You don't even have to play the roots a lot of the time..
the Bass player often can have that covered..
You can even imply a 12 Bar Blues with 3 single chromatic notes next to each other on a single string...
Major Third in the middle that's the tonic...Flat 7s on each side the 4 and the 5....
It also inverts when you move it a Tritone..
Flat 7 is the Tonic with Two Major Thirds on each side..
Gm is a big key for me. I use it a lot, but morphing into G major and back so often that I get dizzy. One of my favourite things with it is te old bass player's trick of playing the major 3 on the way up and the minor 3 on the way back down (There is probably a proper name for this.)
Throw in F# and that's about it for me. I see no point in using keys like G# where the instrument has nothing much in the way of open strings to add richness and variety to the sound. If you are just going to play up the neck, you might as well play electric.
The obvious thing to do would be to capo up and pretend it's in E on the guitar but I quite like doing it without - a lot of the open string notes are actually usable when soloing down by the nut, you've got a 3, 6, 9, b5 and maj 7.
Eb would be the worst one for me, but can't recall anyone ever calling for anything in that key in years (not counting the SRV and Hendrix tunes that result from down-tuned guitars).
Ab also quite uncommon though I do one song in that key with my band, partly just adjusted for vocal range, and also to make a change from G which I use too much...
Favourite uncommon key would be F though.