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  2. Open B tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_B_tuning

    Open B Tuning is an open tuning for guitar. The open string notes in this tuning are B-F ♯-B-F ♯-B-D ♯. It uses the three notes that form the triad of a B major chord: B, the root note; F ♯, the perfect fifth; and D ♯, the major third. When the guitar is strummed without fretting any of the strings, a B major chord is sounded. This ...

  3. Guitar tunings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_tunings

    The irregularity has a price. Chords cannot be shifted around the fretboard in the standard tuning E–A–D–G–B–E, which requires four chord-shapes for the major chords. There are separate chord-forms for chords having their root note on the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth strings. [44] These are called inversions.

  4. List of guitar tunings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_guitar_tunings

    Drop BB-F ♯-b-E-G ♯-C ♯ / B-G ♭-b-E-A ♭-D ♭ One and one half steps down from Drop D. This tuning is most often used by modern rock and heavy metal bands.

  5. Guitar chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_chord

    A chord is inverted when the bass note is not the root note. Chord inversion is especially simple in M3 tuning. Chords are inverted simply by raising one or two notes by three strings; each raised note is played with the same finger as the original note. Inverted major and minor chords can be played on two frets in M3 tuning.

  6. Chord notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord_notation

    Although they are used occasionally in classical music, typically in an educational setting for harmonic analysis, these names and symbols are "universally used in jazz and popular music", [1] in lead sheets, fake books, and chord charts, to specify the chords that make up the chord progression of a song or other piece of music. A typical ...

  7. Just intonation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_intonation

    The first is in equal temperament; the second is in just intonation. The pair of chords is repeated with a transition from equal temperament to just intonation between the two chords. In the equal temperament chords a roughness or beating can be heard at about 4 Hz and about 0.8 Hz. In the just intonation triad, this roughness is absent.

  8. Harmonization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonization

    The fourth degree in major may be substituted for a seventh chord to create a "bluesy" sound. In a progression going up a fourth, if the first chord is a minor seventh chord, it can also be substituted for a seventh chord; a relative second degree can also be added before it to create a ii–V–I turnaround. (A sole minor seventh or seventh ...

  9. Musical temperament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_temperament

    In the words of William Hubbard's Musical Dictionary (1908), an anomalous chord is a "chord containing an interval" that "has been made very sharp or flat in tempering the scale for instruments of fixed pitches". [2] The development of well temperament allowed fixed-pitch instruments to play reasonably well in all of the keys.

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