A chord can have about just only four notes in it, but depending on how you voice it, it can sound so sweet. And is this one, okay so there are only four notes in it. So lastly move to the last one, but we are not playing the Eb, we are playing the Db. We are not playing the Ab, we are playing the Gb. So this was the last. So this is here I hear.
So what you have? You have E, you have Ab, you have Db and you have Gb. This is used in going to the F minor or two as a passing chord. So off that C you can play this chord too. So on my left hand; I am still playing the ditone C and E. But, I am playing C with my pinky and I am stretching my thumb up to the next E. So, instead of playing like this, what you can, apply a minus like this.
It sounds a little fuller to me. So, on my left hand I have C, with my pinky and I am playing E with my thumb and then with my right hand I am playing Bb, Db, Gb. This is like a tension note. It gives us some tension, and that you can go to the F minor right there, but we are going to get into chord progresses.
Now this chord provides a lot of, a lot of variety. So sometimes I just stay on it or if I want to change it a little bit you can raise that, Gb to G. I use it from going to the C to the F minor. So I use it like this. That's another way you can do it. So something like this... Now that you hear this melody, it can go real stupidly as I will say or people look out at these like a stupid chord. I am going to teach you a stupid chord.
So basically, this is the melody, off this chord. So you can either play like this and this is more of an open way; it still sounds so we then move on and you are playing that C, then E and your Bb, Db and Gb. So this is the melody. Remember, you can raise that Gb to G. So, if you want to flip that, all you have to do is, play a full chord and this is the stupid part, that we're getting to.
Transcription by:
Scribe4you Transcription Services