Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Electric Guitar Club

9 members • $15/month

Guitar for Beginners

260 members • Free

Guitar Gym Pro (free)

3.2k members • Free

Ben's Blues Guitar Lessons

57 members • Free

Fretboard Freedom

360 members • Free

Piano with Ease Mini

14 members • $8/m

Piano with Ease 🎹

256 members • Free

Absolute Guitar Ave

11 members • Free

15 contributions to Rock N Blues Fretboard Friends
3 likes • 1d
It's almost time. There's no post and nothing on the Calendar. Canceled?
Theory Bites 6 - Do we even use this one?
The answer is basically - no. But we are going to cover it anyways. The last chord in the Key of G. F# Diminished. F# A C. Memorize it? Sure! But we almost never use it, you probably wont either. I’ll tell you how you can use it, and then!!!! I’ll suggest a cool alternative TO it that we can use and that is frequently used as an “outside” chord IN G! How to use it: This chord can be used as a V chord. the D to go straight to G. It resolves nicely. Sounds weird, but resolves nicely. This concludes our key of G! Now how to use something I consider more useful? Instead of the viio (Roman numeral for the last chord diminished). let’s kick that back a half step more and make it a major chord, the “Flat 7 chord in G”. the bVII - F major. It too works now with the rest of the chords in G In fact without it, Freebird doesnt exist! G D Em F C D - Intro to Freebird I V vi bVII IV V. When making a bVII in any key take the Letter of that Key, pop it back a letter before, and make it a major chord. so if my Key is G The alphabet letter just before G is F F major is my bVII and sounds great going to G! Hope this made sense! Would love your thoughts and feedback!
1 like • 3d
@Sean Christiansen's theory bites was an interesting and enjoyable ride into music theory. I learned some cool stuff.
Theory Bites 5 - Just a little nibble!
If been following the series, then you know that we have just gone through the five chord in the key of G. It is now Chord 6 in the key. We know it as a few things, and you may have run across these terms. “The 6 chord” “The relative minor” “The 6 minor, or 6m” if youre into the Nashville numbering system. “vi” They all stand for the same thing. In our Exploration of the key of G, its one chord. E minor or Em. It is made of the notes E G B. Thats all you need to do to memorize the Chord, and label it as the 6 chord in G. So in the key now: G Am Bm C D and now Em In Nashville its “1 2m 3m 4 5 6m in the key of G” In Roman Numbers its “I, ii, iii, IV, V and vi in G” You should have easily memorized all the notes that make up these chords and be drilling on them, if youve applied yourself to this series by now, right? If so, the key of G is yours for life, (just about!) Thats going to be a common key, if not the most common one you as a guitar player are likely to face. And at least in ONE key you'll hold a lot of knowledge, and be pretty strongly able to follow theory in that key! So why not be a beast in knowing it, right? Till next time, we are almost done!
1 like • 4d
Very good series! On to #6!
Theory Bites 4 - Better Late than Never
hello everybody, if you have been following the series, hopefully you are now comfortable with understanding the first four chords in the key of G G Am Bm C In addition to this, I hope that you have committed the notes of that triad to memory. For those that have been taken some sort of course to learn the notes on the neck, this is a great practice, to drill on some of those notes and find them on your guitar neck! Today is the fifth chord in the Key of G, and honestly the most important chord in the key, besides G so there are two things you want to do: Know its name, and spelling, but know the power it has. the Chord is D Major, its the “five chord” in G Memorize the notes that make up D major: DF#A The power of the “five chord” is, if youre playing a song in the Key of G, and you want to come BACK to G… Play a D chord. It wants to resolve on G! It sounds resolved when you do a D to G. Till tomorrow!
2 likes • 7d
@Matt Wilson I didn't know the five chord want to resolve back to the root. That's news to me. And I don't know what ones want to go away.
0 likes • 4d
@Sean Christiansen Just saw this. I'll look at it. Thank you!
Theory Bites 2 - The three chord!
Hope you got something out of the first day, and thank you for the feedback and responses! Today I want to talk briefly about the Key of G and compare it to the Key of C. Theres only one difference between the key of C which we all know is based around that major scale, a string of letters C to C. The difference between C major and G major, is ONE note. its F#. So if we compare the notes from C major to G major scales. C D E F G A B C G A B C D E F# G Same letters. but in G to G the F is F#. Thats it. The reason I bring up that F# in the key of G, is because we will be seeing it in today’s chord. Bm, the “three chord” in G So yesterday, we learned the “one chord” G major made of the notes “G B D”. Did you memorize it? Hope so! Its dead easy. If you did… its yours for life! And we learned that the “two chord” in the key was the A minor chord. “A C E”. Did you memorize the word ace? If so congratulations! Cool! So today in the key of G we have the “three chord”. B minor - Spelled B D F# So easy to memorize! Just one chord today! Thats it. So in the key of G we've got. G Am and Bm So if I wrote a song today and used the key of G, could I use one of these other chords like Am or Bm in any order I want with the G, and write a song? Yep! And those chords would fit together perfectly, over any melody I made up, that used all the notes (or any of the notes) from the G major scale! To summarize: One chord today! Bm - BDF#. Bm is the “three chord” in G! Always. See you tomorrow!
1 like • 6d
@Sean Christiansen Yes, I see the difference in order to avoid possible confusion.
0 likes • 4d
@Sean Christiansen So correct me if I'm wrong, but I see B minor as 1st string 2nd fret (F#), 2nd string 3rd fret (D), and 3rd string 4th fret (B), 4th string Open (D). Am I thinking right?
1-10 of 15
Phil Smith
3
3points to level up
@phil-smith-1431
As a retired individual residing in Kansas, USA, I aspire to learn songs from artists such as Dean Martin, classic Country songs, and improvisation.

Active 3h ago
Joined Jul 2, 2026
USA