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Banjo Hangout - Music Theory Forum Feed
1.) Key Chords Up/Mode Notes Down
2.) New Celtic "modal" tunings
3.) Can higher quality banjos increase your BPM
4.) you'll have to bear with me!
5.) Tuning
6.) Licks=Scale Notes?
7.) Tablature vs. Sheet Music
8.) Coming up with counterpoint for backup / duets
9.) What is this chord?
10.) music theory video
11.) G harmonic minor scale
12.) Circle of Fifths
13.) high & lonesome
14.) Open tunings
15.) thirds and sixths
16.) pentatonic scale?
17.) G modal ( mountain minor ) chords
18.) Tritonal Substitution
19.) The Grass is Blue
20.) E major sounds sour
21.) Asus2
22.) guitar key Vs.banjo keys
23.) cherryholmes
24.) tuning to D minor
25.) 5th String Confusion (Capo??)
26.) Southpaws
27.) Capos and tuning?
28.) Difficult Chords
29.) Music theory joke --, C, Eb and G walk into a bar.
30.) playing styles
31.) Playing in B minor
32.) Ernest T grass
33.) Improvising and licks
34.) Traditional Music
35.) Banjo theory 101, still have questions
36.) 3 notes with a "3" under them in tab?
37.) Circle of Chords
38.) Is this the "Cadd9/D" chord?
39.) "Chops"
40.) A great site to learn music theory!
41.) 2-string harmonies
42.) Help with songs
43.) help finding a chart
44.) Substitute G for D minor
45.) Triplets
46.) banjo and uke
47.) Help with notes in a chord!!!
48.) notes on the neck
49.) Melodic?
50.) Chords from Standard Notation
Topics
A guitar is a musical instrument characterized by its visually dominant body and neck. Guitar strings are strung parallel to the neck, whose surface is covered by the fingerboard (fretboard). By depressing a string against the fingerboard, the effective length of a string can be altered, which in turn changes the frequency at which the string will vibrate when plucked. Guitarists typically use one hand to pluck the strings and the other to depress the strings against the fingerboard. The strings may be plucked using either fingers or a plectrum (guitar pick), thus creating the sound of notes or chords. The strings of a guitar produce little sound by themselves. Instead, their vibration must be amplified to audibly useful levels. In general, this amplication is achieved either mechanically or electronically, with the result being that there are two main categories of guitar: acoustic (mechanical amplification) and electric (electronic amplification).




