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  2. High in Low Places - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_in_Low_Places

    "High in Low Places" was written by Nick Santino, Alex Silverman, Sean Silverman and Reeve Powers and Kevin Fisher. Production was handled by members of the band as well as from Damien Leclaire, Robert Adam Stevenson and Ryan Gose. [4] The track is described as alternative rock, featuring groovy basslines, shimmering guitar chords and soothing ...

  3. Guitar chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_chord

    The most basic three-chord progressions of Western harmony have only major chords. In each key, three chords are designated with the Roman numerals (of musical notation): The tonic (I), the subdominant (IV), and the dominant (V). While the chords of each three-chord progression are numbered (I, IV, and V), they appear in other orders. [f] [18]

  4. Chord (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord_(music)

    Seventh chords are tertian chords, constructed by adding a fourth note to a triad, at the interval of a third above the fifth of the chord. This creates the interval of a seventh above the root of the chord, the next natural step in composing tertian chords. The seventh chord built on the fifth step of the scale (the dominant seventh) is the ...

  5. Regular tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_tuning

    The shifting of chords is especially simple for the regular tunings that repeat their open strings, in which case chords can be moved vertically: Chords can be moved three strings up (or down) in major-thirds tuning, [3] and chords can be moved two strings up (or down) in augmented-fourths tuning. Regular tunings thus appeal to new guitarists ...

  6. Scale (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_(music)

    Though the scale is not a chord, and might never be heard more than one note at a time, still the absence, presence, and placement of certain key intervals plays a large part in the sound of the scale, the natural movement of melody within the scale, and the selection of chords taken naturally from the scale. [8]

  7. Inversions higher than third - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inversions_higher_than_third

    In music theory, inversions higher than the third require extended chords; the fourth inversion requires a ninth chord, the fifth an eleventh chord, etc. Regarding these extensions, the writer Marcus Miller notes that: If you're working with extended chords, there are more than two possible inversions.

  8. Double bass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_bass

    The double bass (/ ˈ d ʌ b əl b eɪ s /), also known as the upright bass, the acoustic bass, the bull fiddle, or simply the bass, is the largest and lowest-pitched chordophone [1] in the modern symphony orchestra (excluding rare additions such as the octobass). [2]

  9. Ptolemy's table of chords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptolemy's_table_of_chords

    Ptolemy used geometric reasoning based on Proposition 10 of Book XIII of Euclid's Elements to find the chords of 72° and 36°. That Proposition states that if an equilateral pentagon is inscribed in a circle, then the area of the square on the side of the pentagon equals the sum of the areas of the squares on the sides of the hexagon and the ...