A gsus4 chord consists of the notes G, C, and D. The sus stands for suspended. In this instance the C is the "suspended" note, because the natural resolve wants it to move to B, which would then turn the chord into G major.
A sustained or suspended chord is a chord where the fourth, or alternately second, is played with or replaces the third. The second, third, fourth words reflect the place of the note in the key signature's scale.
In jazz, the sus note is usually a second in the bass.
A Dsus4 chord could be a Dmajor chord (D F# A), but with the F# replaced by the fourth, or G. So it would be D G A.
The G sus contains the notes C D G. These are the root, fourth, and fifth, just as above.
Your fingers, index, middle, ring, and pinky, are numbered 1-2-3-4, respectively.
The strings are numbered 1-2-3-4-5-6, with 1 being the highest-pitched string, and 6 being the lowest.
The frets are numbered starting a the end of the neck, furthest from the bridge and closest to the head.
So 1 way to play the G chord:
3rd finger, 6th (low E) string, 3rd fret
2nd finger, 5th string, 2nd fret
4th finger, 1st string, 3rd fret.
Strum all six strings.
Or, you can play the G chord another way:
3rd finger 1st string 3rd fret
1st finger 5th string 2nd fret
2nd finger 6th string 3rd fret
--------------|------------|----3----|----------|----------|-----
--------------|------------|---------|----------|----------|-----
--------------|------------|---------|----------|----------|-----
--------------|------------|---------|----------|----------|-----
--------------|-----1-----|----------|----------|----------|-----
--------------|------------|----2----|----------|----------|-----
You can also play it in the bar position, where you hold all strings in the 3rd fret, and then add 5th fret on strings 5 and 4 and 4th fret on string 3. (An E major chord shifted three half steps to G Major.)
It is a G major chord, drop the 3rd, add the 4th and keep the 5th.
This Gsus chord is : g,c and d
The root note on a guitar is the same thing as the root note on any other instrument. If you are playing a C chord, C is the root. With a G chord, G is the root, and so on.
B chord guitar charts from the following websites: Guitar About, Ultimate Guitar, Jam Play, Just In Guitar, Guitar Lessons World, Guitar Chord, Chord Book, Guitar Noise, Jazz Guitar Lessons, Chord Find, to name a few.
The letters and numbers appearing above guitar music indicate the chords to be played. The letters indicate the root of the chord (for example - G means a G major chord, but a G/B would be asking you to play a G major chord, but have B as the lowest note heard). The numbers indicate variants on a chord, such as a suspension to be resolved, or a chord with an added 7th tone (for example, G7 would be a G chord, but add in the seventh note above, an F for a bit more interest).
Easy to raise E to G. Could be stressful on your guitar. Open tuning would be easy. Tuning the guitar to the G chord. Dropping E to G would make for a slack string.
well, a C chord is built of the notes : C E D G C E which is like this on guitar : e|-0--| B|-1--| G|-0--| D|-2--| A|-3--| E|----| a C v2 chord will probably be a barre . v2 can refer to alot of versions, but here are most of them : http://www.8notes.com/guitar_chord_chart/C.asp
Play the G chord on the guitar.
"G" Minor is an open "G" chord-THe same as the "A" Minor chord.
The root note on a guitar is the same thing as the root note on any other instrument. If you are playing a C chord, C is the root. With a G chord, G is the root, and so on.
B chord guitar charts from the following websites: Guitar About, Ultimate Guitar, Jam Play, Just In Guitar, Guitar Lessons World, Guitar Chord, Chord Book, Guitar Noise, Jazz Guitar Lessons, Chord Find, to name a few.
The letters and numbers appearing above guitar music indicate the chords to be played. The letters indicate the root of the chord (for example - G means a G major chord, but a G/B would be asking you to play a G major chord, but have B as the lowest note heard). The numbers indicate variants on a chord, such as a suspension to be resolved, or a chord with an added 7th tone (for example, G7 would be a G chord, but add in the seventh note above, an F for a bit more interest).
Easy to raise E to G. Could be stressful on your guitar. Open tuning would be easy. Tuning the guitar to the G chord. Dropping E to G would make for a slack string.
If you have a capo you can put it on the first fret and play a G chord, or you can play a bar chord on the 4th fret (4-6-6-5-4-4)
It's pretty simple. Powerchord don't have any major or minor sound. So if you have chords C a G d you play C A G D powerchords.
(This is based on strumming) Verse 1: C chord (C, E, G) Am Chord (A, C, E) F chord (F, A, C) G chord (G, B, D) X2 Chorus (Played as chords; like verses): C Have I found you? Am F G Flightless Bird, Jealous, Weeping C Or lost you Am American Mouth F G Big bill Looming Verse 2: C Chord, Am Chord, F Chord, G Chord, X2 Repeat Chorus And thats it, I have basically converted guitar chords to piano chords. I have no idea if its right you will just have to try it and find out :)
well, a C chord is built of the notes : C E D G C E which is like this on guitar : e|-0--| B|-1--| G|-0--| D|-2--| A|-3--| E|----| a C v2 chord will probably be a barre . v2 can refer to alot of versions, but here are most of them : http://www.8notes.com/guitar_chord_chart/C.asp
There are several guitar chord finders available on the internet. Simply go to Google and search for "guitar chord finder," and you will be presented with thousands of choices!
it's not a chord it means to strike the strings muted/or don't play those notes.