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Chord help please!!!
Question: I need help figuring out these chords.Please help Ab/C Bbsus E2 B/E D/E A/E E/G# C2 C/E F2 C2/B E2/C# A2 E/B B7sus/F# Esus D2 Please help me out with these chords i have trouble figuring out split chords, if you know any of these please post them, i need help on all these chords.Thank you!!!! Answer: This is just a suggestion. http://www.chordfind.com/ There are many other sites too. Hope this helps. Take Care df Answer: Originally Posted by DavidFrank This is just a suggestion. http://www.chordfind.com/ There are many other sites too. Hope this helps. Take Care df Thanks but they don't have the chords i'm looking for Answer: try this: http://www.gospelmusic.org.uk/resour..._chart_big.htm hope it helps! Answer: Sorry that it didn't help you find all of those chords. Here are a few more. http://www.andrews.edu/~aldy/ogre.cgi http://www.gootar.com/folder/guitar.html http://www.guitarnotes.com/guitar/no...timate11.shtml If you type a chord in, use the capital letter. Hope this helps. Take Care df Answer: Try the one on this site too - /chords.php If your still having trouble after those sites, let me know and I can work something up for you - but here's a quick explanation for your split chord delimma: C/E means you play a regular C Chord, but the Bass Guitar plays an E. You can also double this on the guitar by just adding the 6th String Open E to the Chord. This rule goes for all the "split chords" you've listed. It's not necessary for the guitar to play the bass note - but it generally sounds better if you do - especially when playing without a bass guitar. That just means you play a different root not on the chord. Case in point - E/B would work by not playing the 6th string open E thus emphasizing the 5th string B note as the root. The rest of the chords you list are most likely on the sites you've been given, although the 2 chords might not be since they are more of a modern day guitar phenom. Basically, all you do is drop the 3rd in the chord a whole step (two frets) and you've got it. Another way to look at it is to find the 9th chord and drop the 3rd and the 7th and you have a 2 chord. In many cases I prefer to replace the two chord with a +9 chord for a fuller and richer sounding chord - which means I keep the 3rd and play it as a 1-3-5-9 chord (or a 9th chord without the 7th). For instance, a C+9 would be played by adding the D on the 2nd string 3rd fret. So from bass to high you play a C-E-G-D-E or 1-3-5-9-3 A true C2 would be a C chord but with an open 4th or D string and the high G on the first string third fret. So you would play C-D-G-C-G or 1-2-5-1-5. I hope that's not too confusing, and like I said if it is - let me know and I'll work up some fretboard diagrams for you real quick. Copyright © 2007 - 2008 www.thanktoday.com
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