| bio | website | dev-hq.net |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 1 month |
| seen | Nov 15 '12 at 20:41 | |
| stats | profile views | 0 |
|
Nov 15 |
awarded | Editor |
|
Nov 15 |
revised |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords added 205 characters in body |
|
Apr 16 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Apr 16 |
comment |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords Thanks :D /tooshort |
|
Apr 16 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Apr 16 |
accepted | Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords |
|
Apr 15 |
awarded | Student |
|
Apr 15 |
comment |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords What's an inversion? |
|
Apr 15 |
comment |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords I don't have a piano handy - I'm playing the notes on the guitar. I'm afraid to say I still don't understand what you're trying to say -- If we're starting on 'G' and go up 8 steps in G-major, C-major, F-major or any other scale I've tried, you end up on G! C maj: C D E F G A B C D E F G - Eight steps apart from the major scale (TTSTTTS). Am I doing something wrong? |
|
Apr 15 |
comment |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords I can put the G up the G-major scale to C, then a C up the C-major scale to F, but I get confused when you say "Essentially you have the outline of a G7sus4". You mean these three notes would make up a G7sus4 - why is this? Then you start talking about things being an octave up which completely throws me off - anything an octave up is surely itself? G and octave up is G, C and octave up is C. |
|
Apr 15 |
comment |
Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords The last paragraph there confused me a little bit - was my talk of pushing the third down to a second for sus2 and up to a fourth for sus4 correct? |
|
Apr 15 |
asked | Scale modification in sus2 and sus4 chords |