No it is not the same.
G major has a tonic (root) a third and a fifth
The G major 7 has an added seventh
In the case of G maj 7 the the notes would be G B E and the added sventh is in this case an F#
7 chords are mostly used in jazz and sometimes in pop or rock music in order to alter the harmony of the song.
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).
It is a chord, on a guitar it would be played like below http://z.about.com/d/guitar/1/0/k/9/chord_g7_open.gif On the Piano and in Sheet music, it looks like this http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2593/3763824399_1d28fe1970_o.jpg
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
To find an inversion of a Chord, you simply move the lowest note in the chord up and octave and leave the rest the same. Alternatively, you can move the highest note in the chord down an octave. Example: C-E-G (C Major Root Position) E-G-C (C Major 1st Inversion) G-C-E (C Major 2nd Inversion
- Introduction: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x + 6x in the Lyrics - Chorus: - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| (Instrumental) - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| -Back to Lyrics chords: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x -Back to Chorus: F# (F Sharp Major this time) G#m (G Sharp MINOR This Time) |2'nd Cord| B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| F# (F Sharp Major) (Back to F Sharp Major) Repeat 4x this time - BRIDGE: C# (C Sharp Major) / (Very QUICK switch from "C sharp major to D#m (D Sharp Minor which is the 2'nd chord) (Hold that note for a little longer as the song goes) (Then switch to "F#m" F Sharp "Major" then quickly go to: "G# (G Sharp Major) |then hold that note|. B (B Flat Major) |then hold that note as well| Then Back to the original chord to hold again: Which is: "D#m (D Sharp Minor) - Back to Instrumental: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x - Back to Chorus: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x this time! I hope this helps! Thanks! -Patrick! (ZitranzaTLK) Keyboardist/ Musician!
There is actually no such thing as a "dominant scale", however you can use the notes of a dominant 7th chord as a scale and that can begin on any note, the dominant 7th chord in C major is G7 and G7 uses all white keys (G, B, D and F), the structure of a dominant 7th chord is the major triad plus the flatted 7th.
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).
It is a chord, on a guitar it would be played like below http://z.about.com/d/guitar/1/0/k/9/chord_g7_open.gif On the Piano and in Sheet music, it looks like this http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2593/3763824399_1d28fe1970_o.jpg
The notes of the G Major chord are G, B and D.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
The 'G' Major chord is 'G','D','B'
G B and D
G, b, d
"G" Minor is an open "G" chord-THe same as the "A" Minor chord.
D
G major, C major, D major.
The dominant of A major is the chord: E - G# - B