Starting on the high E string (the thinnest string), Numbers represent fingers:
# 0 |------|------| # 0 |------|------| # X |--1--|------| # X |------|--3--| # X |------|--2--| # 0 |------|------|
Starting on the high E string (the thinnest string), Numbers represent fingers:
# X |-------|--2--|------| # X |-------|------|--3--| # X |-------|--1--|------| # 0 |-------|------|------| # X |-------|------|------| # X |-------|------|------|
Easiest way is an open D...
xx0232 (don't play the bottom two strings, index finger on 2nd fret on the first thin (3rd, G) string, middle on 2 on the top (thinnest, e) string and ring finger on 3rd fret on 2nd string.
You can also play it at the fifth fret like an A if you can do barre chords:
X5777(5)
or, a nice sexy full D chord:
10 12 12 11 10 10 (same as an E chord but ten frets up)
Happy rocking! :-)
The shape your index, middle and ring finger are supposed to be making is a small triangle, where your index is the top of the triangle.
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now apply that to the three thinnest strings on your guitar, at the 2nd fret for the middle and the ring finger and at the first fret with your index finger. now play the four thinnest strings. tada. successful d-7 playa.
That depends wholly on the instrument with which you play the B chord.
Second (B) string, hold first fret (raising B to C).
Third (G) and fourth (D) strings, hold second fret (raising G to A and D to E)+.
Other strings open.
It depends on what the chord progression is. Just about any chord will work depending on what the melody sounds like or what chord progression is.
It sounds like just Eminor, in the root position.
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
E/a/e/b/e
I think it is Csus2 if you mute the low e string
It depends on what the chord progression is. Just about any chord will work depending on what the melody sounds like or what chord progression is.
It sounds like just Eminor, in the root position.
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
On a keyboard, an F chord triad is f - a - c. On the guitar, you take an E chord and bar it up one fret. (Incidentally, it's f - a - c on the guitar too.)
Joseph E. Kovach has written: 'Chords for the guitar' -- subject(s): Guitar, Chord diagrams
E/a/e/b/e
I think it is Csus2 if you mute the low e string
"E" is the 6th string on a standard guitar. If that is not what your asking, then your question is unanswerable with the given information.
it's not a chord it means to strike the strings muted/or don't play those notes.
There are lots of ways to play that chord on a guitar. Assuming your guitar is tuned to standard(E A D G B e) tuning, one way to play an E flat Minor is to bar the entire 6th fret with your first finger starting on the A string up to the e string, put your ring finger on the 8th fret of the D string, pinky on the 8th fret of the G string, middle finger on the 7th fret of the B string, and the 6th fret of the e string should still be barred. Play the chord from the A string, and you'll have E Flat Minor.
It indicates that the chord in question contains the 7th note of that key. For instance, a C7 chord would be some combination of C, E, G, and B notes.
Db is a one-half step drop from a standard tuned D. Look up a chord diagram to show you. Typically it is (from small e sting to big E): 1 3 2 open open open