because you can play 12 bar blues as if each chord refers to the relative blues scale, for example, blues in C, you can play the C Blues scale during the C chord, and an F blues scale during the F chord and so on.
it sounds minor and ultimately makes it sound more bluesy, so to speak
A chord that is tonic is the 1 or I chord of the music that you are playing. It is the key of the music that you are playing. If the tonic is C major then you would be playing in the key of C major and dominant or 5 chord would be G major.
The C major chord is the chord that you will learn when first learning music.
I-IV-V chord progressions. Pentatonic scale with the blue notes added. The blue note is the 4th note of the major scale raised a semi-tone e.g. in A major scale it is D sharp. There are a lot of embellishments in lead guitar e.g. bends, slides, hammer ons, puller offs, vibrato. Also 12 bar blues is good. I love to turn around, when playing my twelve bar chi chi cha. Oh yah. That's blues there. I love da blues. But da blues makes me blue. Also say "I woke up this morning" for that real blues sound.
In a major scale the subdominant chord is a major chord,thus the dominant chord is major7.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
A chord that is tonic is the 1 or I chord of the music that you are playing. It is the key of the music that you are playing. If the tonic is C major then you would be playing in the key of C major and dominant or 5 chord would be G major.
The C major chord is the chord that you will learn when first learning music.
I-IV-V chord progressions. Pentatonic scale with the blue notes added. The blue note is the 4th note of the major scale raised a semi-tone e.g. in A major scale it is D sharp. There are a lot of embellishments in lead guitar e.g. bends, slides, hammer ons, puller offs, vibrato. Also 12 bar blues is good. I love to turn around, when playing my twelve bar chi chi cha. Oh yah. That's blues there. I love da blues. But da blues makes me blue. Also say "I woke up this morning" for that real blues sound.
In a major scale the subdominant chord is a major chord,thus the dominant chord is major7.
The first, third, fifth, and seventh note derived from the C major scale, so: C-E-G-B for a major seventh chord (Cmaj7) and the seventh note flattened to Bb or B flat in the C7 chord commonly used in pop/blues as a final chord but in most Classical Music to be resolved in F.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
The easiest way would be to use a B or B7 chord right before playing E.
Not sure what your question is, but a major chord with a raised fifth is called an augmented chord.
12 bar blues in F major is a blues pattern of 12 bars in the key of F major. A basic blues progression uses 3 chords - the tonic (I) the dominant (V), and the subdominant (IV). For the key of F major the Tonic is F, the Dominant is C, and the subdominant is B-flat. A basic 12 bar blues pattern in F major is: F -- 3 bars F7 -- 1 bar B flat 7 -- 2 bars F -- 2 bars C7 -- 1 bar B flat 7 -- 1 bar F -- 2 bars
Generally, a minor chord has a darker sound.
The notes in the D major chord are D, F-sharp, and A.
The note names in a major chord and a minor chord are the same. The only difference is the flattened third. F major chord is F A C where f minor is F Ab C.