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Reddit mentions of THE POSTER of PRACTICAL GUITAR CHORDS

Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of THE POSTER of PRACTICAL GUITAR CHORDS. Here are the top ones.

THE POSTER of PRACTICAL GUITAR CHORDS
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  • “The Poster of Practical Guitar Chords” is the same design that's on the “The Practical Guitar Chord and Fret Board Chart” but measures 11" X 17" - printed on 80 lb. Cover Stock - Full Color - Great for Framing!
  • “The Poster of Practical Guitar Chords” has chords that you can use in a jamming or working musical environment with the most used Guitar chords. Each key starts out showing you how to play the major, major 7th, minor, minor 7th., - from there, in various keys are chord diagrams for 5th's., 6ths., 9ths., augmented, diminished, suspended, Barre (bar) chord positions, and then some ...
  • Each chord diagram shows you where to put which finger on the fretboard, which open strings to play - or not to play and which fret to Barre for the Barre chords - (see the examples) - all with No Pages to turn
  • Keys are listed from the top of the poster to the bottom in "Fifths" - (Ex: the top row are chords in the key of C, then comes G, D, A, E, etc.)
  • Welcome to the Ultimate Resource to Learn or Review the Practical Chord Positions of Guitar - no matter your skill level, genre' or musical style ... Enjoy
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Found 1 comment on THE POSTER of PRACTICAL GUITAR CHORDS:

u/minichado · 2 pointsr/NDQ

I've been at it a while, but my approach to music is not traditional. There's a few paths to go down. Learning to read sheet music is a very difficult path, especially to start, on guitar. You want to start by learning chords. get a chord chart/poster and learn the major chords. you can play a very large percentage of songs just knowing major chords.

Also, get a capo. change key, easily play more songs with the same chords.

I was learning hey jude on piano the other night and when I looked up the music, the guitar chords were already there. easy enough. you find this in lots of music books lately. I also played guitar and other string instruments at church for a number of years, just from knowing chords. nothing fancy, but great practice.

If you want to get into advanced technique stuff, I'd save that for later months. and I can point you in some different directions for that

there is something online called 'tablature' or just 'guitar tabs' and it basically can write out songs for you in a notation that is a number on a bar and staff represeting the fret position of a note to play. it makes more sense than bar and staff , but I wouldn't call it 'reading music'. it's definitely the practical approach to learning guitar, however, and I would never frown upon it.

here's a quick example of tablature. There are also tons of apps (ipad/phone/computer) for using this notation to learn.