A chord is, by definition, three or more notes sounded simultaneously. A string by definition, can only play one note at a time, so you can't play chords on it. If you mean the 'notes' for the seventh and ninth fret on an E string, the answers are B and C#, respectively. In guitar music, they are written as the B above the top ledger line on the treble (G) clef, and the C# on the second ledger line above; but the actual pitch is an octave lower than that.
To play the note 'A', there are many different options; here are a few: Open 5th string 2nd fret 3rd string 5th fret 1st string To play an open 'A' chord, depress the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th strings at the second fret (press just behind the fret), and strum strings 5 - 1. To play an 'A' barre chord, barre all the strings at the fifth fret with the index finger, depress the 3rd string at the sixth fret, the 4th & 5th strings at the seventh fret, and strum all the strings
yes. 1st finger = 1st fret 3rd string, 2nd finger = 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger = 2nd fret 5th string. All other strings are played open. correction: the chord described above is an E chord An A chord is played by placing your 2nd finger on the 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger on the 2nd fret 3rd string, 4th finger on the 2nd fret 2nd string, 1st and 5th strings played open, 6th string not played.
1st string open 2nd string 1st fret 3rd string open 4th string 2nd fret 5th string 3rd fret Don't strum the 6th string.
Ten chords sound great on the bass:C major chord- 8th fret on the E string and 9th fret on the G string.(add the 9th fret on the D string to make it a Cmaj7 chord) or(add the 8th fret on the D string to make it a C7chord)C minor chord- 8th fret on the E string and 8th fret on the G string.(add the 8th fret on the D string to make it a Cm7chord)Also playing in fifths sound good as well:E5 chord- 7th fret on the A string and 9th fret on the D string.Remember, you can move these chords anywhere on the instrument.The trick to playing chords on the bass is to keep the notes further apart. Lower notes played closer together become muddy sounding.
An A chord can be played several different ways on the guitar, but the most common A chord is the open A. To play this chord, simply bar your first finger across the second fret of the second, third, and fourth strings. When strumming this chord, be sure not to strum the sixth string.
To play the note 'A', there are many different options; here are a few: Open 5th string 2nd fret 3rd string 5th fret 1st string To play an open 'A' chord, depress the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th strings at the second fret (press just behind the fret), and strum strings 5 - 1. To play an 'A' barre chord, barre all the strings at the fifth fret with the index finger, depress the 3rd string at the sixth fret, the 4th & 5th strings at the seventh fret, and strum all the strings
G chord. Put your middle finger on the 6th string 3rd fret, pointing finger 5th string 2nd fret and index finger 1st string 3rd fret.
yes. 1st finger = 1st fret 3rd string, 2nd finger = 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger = 2nd fret 5th string. All other strings are played open. correction: the chord described above is an E chord An A chord is played by placing your 2nd finger on the 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger on the 2nd fret 3rd string, 4th finger on the 2nd fret 2nd string, 1st and 5th strings played open, 6th string not played.
1st string open 2nd string 1st fret 3rd string open 4th string 2nd fret 5th string 3rd fret Don't strum the 6th string.
Ten chords sound great on the bass:C major chord- 8th fret on the E string and 9th fret on the G string.(add the 9th fret on the D string to make it a Cmaj7 chord) or(add the 8th fret on the D string to make it a C7chord)C minor chord- 8th fret on the E string and 8th fret on the G string.(add the 8th fret on the D string to make it a Cm7chord)Also playing in fifths sound good as well:E5 chord- 7th fret on the A string and 9th fret on the D string.Remember, you can move these chords anywhere on the instrument.The trick to playing chords on the bass is to keep the notes further apart. Lower notes played closer together become muddy sounding.
An A chord can be played several different ways on the guitar, but the most common A chord is the open A. To play this chord, simply bar your first finger across the second fret of the second, third, and fourth strings. When strumming this chord, be sure not to strum the sixth string.
First finger: 2nd fret(1st string counting down) Second finger: 3rd fret (4th string) Third finger: 3rd fret (3rd string) Fourth finger: 3rd fret (2nd string)
Typically, C9 is played as a partial barre chord like this: high E string - covered at third fret by barring with the ring finger B string - covered at third fret by barring with the ring finger G string - covered at third fret by barring with the ring finger D string - index finger at second fret A string - middle finger at third fret low E string - don't play You can also make an open position version of C9 in the following way: high E string - play open B string - pinky at third fret G string - ring finger at third fret D string - index finger at second fret A string - middle finger at third fret low E string - don't play This second version doesn't have the G note in the chord, but that's acceptable to leave out in most cases.
-cindy is the guitarest here- :)u bar the 1st fret n place fingers as follows:ring finger on A string 3rd fret, pinky finger on D string 3rd fret, index finger on the G string 2nd fret.
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.
1st and 2nd strings open 3rd string 1st fret 4th and 5th strings 2nd fret 6th string open
A G 5th chord is a chord in which the root note (1) is G and the fifth note is D. Both notes are played together. There is no 3rd in this chord. The missing 3rd gives it an "empty" or "hollow" sound. These are also referred to as power chords for their "power". On a guitar, the G5 is usually played GDG (1st string 3rd fret, 2nd string 5th fret, 3rd string 5th fret).