[ddots-l] Re: guitar power cords Sorry I was unclear before.

  • From: "chad morrison" <chadmorrison@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 23:25:19 -0600

hey, thanks for the help.  this is way better than what I had before.  sorry 
about the misspelling.  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Andrew English (paper music) 
  To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2010 9:06 AM
  Subject: [ddots-l] Re: guitar power cords Sorry I was unclear before.


  Gosh. I was trying to explain it in an e-mail and it's harder than it seems.

  (Please note, the Chord you're describing is spelled C.H.O.R.D. and the 
spelling for the other kinds of Cords (the vocal cords in anatomy, and power 
cables or wires) is C.O.R.D.)

  Try these basic shapes:
  Bass string (giving the root of the chord) and the next two strings up at 2 
frets higher: you're basic power chord.

  (note: strings listed from the bottom up, x equals mute the string, 0 equals 
open--but few power chords use open strings. for a clean sound only the power 
chord matters.)

  If you're using the E string as the bass string, use the note name of the 
note on that string to determine the chord name. For example: 355xxx is a G 
power chord. The same thing applies to the A string: x355xx is a C power chord.

  Other power chords can only use the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th strings in a partial 
bar form. xx222x is an A power chord. xx777x is a D power chord, and xx999x is 
an E power chord.

  Using one finger (in my case, the index finger) to bar strings 2, 3, and 4 
(muting the rest) leaves all the other fingers free for blues additions at two 
and three frets above that on the same three strings.

  This is more confusing to explain via e-mail than it actually is in practice. 
Experiment and don't try to play power chords in classical style. The whole 
purpose of the power chord is simple open fifth/octave tonality. If the third 
of the chord is present, it's a bonus and sometimes may be undesirable with 
heavily distorted effects.

  As we say, "It's good enough for jazz."

  I hope this helps and doesn't confuse.
  Yours truly,
  Andy English
  www.papermusic.org
  Music Transcription and Consultation Services




    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: chad morrison 
    To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; midimag@xxxxxxxxxxx 
    Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 12:42 PM
    Subject: [ddots-l] guitar power cords Sorry I was unclear before.


    hello, I was unclear before.  I was wondering about a good resorce for 
learning power cords?  Again, sorry about being unclear.  I was in to much of a 
rush before I guess. 
    Thanks
    chad

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