A7 is made up of A, C#, E, and G, so any chord with those four notes.
The Z chord should be first!Then the C, D, A, G and C7, D7, A7, G7. You can play a lot of music with those basic chords.
A7 (A C# E G)m
A 12 bar blues is a song with "12 Bars". It starts with the 1 chord in any given key. Typically the 1 chord is kept for 4 measures. Then the 4 chord for 2 measures. Then back to the 1 chord for 2 more. Then end with 5 chord, 4 chord, then the 1 chord for the last two measures. You can subsitute the second chord for the 4 and the last for 5 if you are going to a turn around.
The song in D minor starts on A7 chord and starts on A, then goes in this sequence. A, E, F, G, A, F, E, D, ending in D minor chord 3 measures. Then starts again in D7 as follows. Jump up to D, A, Bb, C, D, Eb, D, ending in Gm chord. Then starts again G, A, Bb, F, E, F, G, A, E, D, .... C#, Bb, A, G, F, E, D. The second part goes as follows. A, E, A, F, C, B, C, E, D, Bb, A,... G, A, Bb, F, E, F, G, A, E, D, C#, Bb, A, G, F, E, D. End. Songs chords progression is A7, Dm, D7, Gm, Dm, A7, Dm, A7, Dm, C7, f, Gm, Dm, A7..... Hope that helps.
The fastest and easiest way would be to use an A or A7 chord to get to D. An A7/E would work particularly well between an F and D chord. The notes would go F A C, E G A C#, D F# A D.
The Z chord should be first!Then the C, D, A, G and C7, D7, A7, G7. You can play a lot of music with those basic chords.
The chords are: C-A7-D7-G7-C C-A7-D7-G7 C-F-D7 C-A7-D7-G7-C
slash chords are just one chord. A7/G would be an A7 chord in third inversion, so that the G is the bass note. C/E would be a C chord with an E as the bass note (1st inversion) Tks for the answer. It wasn't what I was looking for though. Can you look at the discussion page and see if my question makes sense there?.
A7 (A C# E G)m
The chord A7 which has the notes A, C#, E, G.
A 12 bar blues is a song with "12 Bars". It starts with the 1 chord in any given key. Typically the 1 chord is kept for 4 measures. Then the 4 chord for 2 measures. Then back to the 1 chord for 2 more. Then end with 5 chord, 4 chord, then the 1 chord for the last two measures. You can subsitute the second chord for the 4 and the last for 5 if you are going to a turn around.
The song in D minor starts on A7 chord and starts on A, then goes in this sequence. A, E, F, G, A, F, E, D, ending in D minor chord 3 measures. Then starts again in D7 as follows. Jump up to D, A, Bb, C, D, Eb, D, ending in Gm chord. Then starts again G, A, Bb, F, E, F, G, A, E, D, .... C#, Bb, A, G, F, E, D. The second part goes as follows. A, E, A, F, C, B, C, E, D, Bb, A,... G, A, Bb, F, E, F, G, A, E, D, C#, Bb, A, G, F, E, D. End. Songs chords progression is A7, Dm, D7, Gm, Dm, A7, Dm, A7, Dm, C7, f, Gm, Dm, A7..... Hope that helps.
A major: A, C#, E, A A minor: A, C, E, A A7: A, C#, E, G
Verse-Dm DmMaj7 F Bm7b5 Em7b5 A7 Chorus- F D7 Gm Gdim7 F A7 Dm Bb C F
The fastest and easiest way would be to use an A or A7 chord to get to D. An A7/E would work particularly well between an F and D chord. The notes would go F A C, E G A C#, D F# A D.
Same song as sung by Lighting Hopkins: In key of E Use E, A7, B7
G6, Am7 - Bm7, Cmaj7, Am7/D, G6 - Em7, A7, - Am7, Bm7, Cmaj7, Dmaj7