![]() ![]() ![]() So, for Bb, I just play the GCE strings – so much easier. Take it slow and you’re sure to see improvement! A Bonus Tip From a Student With ArthritisĪfter I posted the video lesson on the Ukulele Tricks YouTube channel, I receive an awesome tip from a senior ukulele player who has to get creative with ukulele chords because of their arthritis.īrett – as a senior uke player, my arthritis has bent my fingers, so barring chords is out of the question…. ![]() If you're a purist, a 7th chord is a 4-note chord made using the three notes of a major or minor chord plus the note one half-step (one fret) below the 7th note of the chord's scale.Remember a chord like this one takes practice and repetition in order for your hands and fingers to build the muscle memory required to execute the chord cleanly every time. Play a two measure forward roll on those three strings - it's a great sound, especially in the key of G. Don't play the 4th or 5th strings and you have A, B, D#. Play the second fret, third string, the second string open, and the first fret, first string. My favorite banjo B7 chord is actually a partial chord that uses open strings. In practice you don't really hear the difference since (1) people fill in the missing B in their heads when they hear the remaining three notes of a 7th chord and (2) if you're playing lead you only play one string at a time anyway, so you often leave notes out of a chord. The second position you listed isn't complete since you're replacing the third string B, which you're not playing anywhere else, giving you F#, A, D#, F#. Since you're adding the A by replacing the first string F#, which is also played on the 4th string, it contains all four notes of the chord (from 4th string to first, F#, B, D#, A). As a general rule, you can make any 7th chord by starting with any major chord and adding the note two frets below the name of the chord.Īctually, your second choice is a complete B7 chord. You can make a B7 chord by taking any B chord and adding an A note. ![]()
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