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- Newsgroups: alt.guitar
- Path: sparky!uunet!utcsri!skule.ecf!torn!watserv2.uwaterloo.ca!watmath!undergrad.math.waterloo.edu!elee
- From: elee@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu (Salty Freckles)
- Subject: Re: Triads well?
- Message-ID: <BxxICq.H05@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>
- Organization: University of Waterloo
- References: <1992Nov17.185250.13975@EE.Surrey.Ac.UK>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 20:31:33 GMT
- Lines: 59
-
- In article <1992Nov17.185250.13975@EE.Surrey.Ac.UK> css1rs@valar.ee.surrey.ac.uk (Russell Smithers) writes:
- >Look are we all dead? I have just asked a question, would some kind soul
- >at least respond to it so I know we are all alive? Please.
-
- I would have thought someone would have responded to this already. According
- to my limited musical theory, triads are chords with three notes in it. I know
- of two basic triads, the major and the minor. A triad should contain both the
- root and the fifth of the scale and either the minor or major third depending
- on what kind of triad it is (major or minor). For example, an A major triad
- would contain the notes A, C# and E, while an A minor triad would contain the
- notes A, C and E. I'm not sure how applicable this is to guitar theory, but
- triads can be played in three different inversions:
-
- 1) Root position, where the lowest note is the root of the scale, the
- second-lowest is the third (major or minor) and the highest is the
- fifth.
-
- 2) 1st inversion, where the lowest note is the third, the second-lowest
- is the fifth and the highest is the root.
-
- 3) 2nd inversion, where the lowest note is the fifth, the second-lowest
- is the root and the highest is the third.
-
- I'm not sure how often triads are used on the guitar, but on the piano, they
- are used primarily as a practice tool to familiarize students with the harmonic
- structures of major and minor scales. If you wanted to play triads on the
- guitar, you'd have to isolate three strings and make sure you played all the
- required notes with the three strings (the root, third and fifth). For
- example, if you wanted to play the D major triads, you would play (in tab):
-
- Root -----
- position -----
- --2-- fifth (A)
- --4-- maj 3rd (F#)
- --5-- root (D)
- -----
-
-
- 1st -----
- inversion --3-- root (D)
- --2-- fifth (A)
- --4-- maj 3rd (F#)
- -----
- -----
-
-
- 2nd --2-- maj 3rd (F#)
- inversion --3-- root (D)
- --2-- fifth (A)
- -----
- -----
- -----
-
- Note that these aren't the only ways to play these chords, but they'll give you
- some idea of how triads are supposed to sound in their different inversions.
- Hope this helps.
-
- Gene Lee
- elee@descartes.UWaterloo.ca
-