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    • Making triads of the notes

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      • The scale determines which chords are in the key, and you can determine which chords are in the scale by making triads of the notes. In other words, for every note in the scale, add the third and fifth notes after it, and you will have your chords.
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  2. Musical Scale Finder and Key Finder. Enter some of the notes you want or even a chord or two. This tool will find the scales compatible with your inputs. Use them to find the right scales for soloing or to complete your melody, harmony or chord progression.

  3. Aug 24, 2021 · You can easily figure out the chords in any key by harmonizing the scale; There are seven chords for every key – one for every note in the scale; The harmonized chords in a Major scale always follow this pattern: Major, minor, minor, Major, Major, minor, diminished

    • Which Key Are You In? The first thing to do is to ensure you know which key you’re in. This is nearly always the first chord of the song (and very often the last, too).
    • Relative Major/minors. If you find in Step 1 that you’re in a minor key, say A minor, or C minor, (or any other), then the first thing you’ve got to do is find its Relative Major key.
    • What’s the ‘Parent Scale’? The Parent Scale is the scale upon which a key is formed and named. Put simply, if you’re in the key of C Major, the parent scale is the C Major scale; if you’re in the key of Eb Major, the parent scale is the Eb Major scale.
    • Make the Scale. Now that you know you need to find, say, the C Major Scale, or the Eb Major scale, let’s make the scale. If you don’t know how to do this, there’s a formula, which works for every Major scale: it’s all about the steps between the notes.
  4. Nov 29, 2021 · Chord Scales Explained: How to Find Chord-Scale Relationships. You can use the notes in a musical scale to create a series of chords with each note of the scale serving as the root of its own chord. A series of chords built off of the pitches in a scale is known as a chord scale.

    • A Look at Triads …
    • …And A Look at The Major Scale
    • How Scales and Chords Work with Each Other
    • Some Applications
    • Final Assignment

    Let’s have a brief reminder on how triads are built. A major triad is made by 3 notes: a root note (that gives the name to the chord), a note 4 frets above the root, and another note 3 frets above the last one. For instance, the C major triad is made by the notes C, E, and G. The note E is 4 frets above the note C, and the note G is 3 frets above t...

    The major scale is defined by the formula W-W-H-W-W-W-H, where “W” stands for “whole tone” (equal to 2 frets on the guitar) and “H” for “half tone” (equal to 1 fret on the guitar). If you have never seen this formula before (and have no idea of what to do with it) please check out my lesson on the Major Scalethat shows everything in detail. Using t...

    Here’s the main concept: the chords associated with a scale are the ones whose notes are all contained into the scale. For instance the C major chord is C, E, G, and all these notes are in the C major scale. To make an example of a chord NOT in the scale, let’s consider the D major chord: its notes are D, F#, A. Since there’s no F# in the C major s...

    The first and most basic application is that all chords coming from the same scale sounds good together, so they are suitable to be used in composing a song. To see this, take some of the chords of the C major scale (I repeat them here: Cmaj, Dmin, Emin, Fmaj, Gmaj, Amin, Bdim) and play them together: they will sound good to your hear. Try this exa...

    As an exercise, work out the chords for the C minor scale: C D Eb F G Ab Bb. You can see the answer by highlighting the next line: Answer: Cmin, Ddim, Ebmaj, Fmin, Gmin, Abmaj, Bbmaj There are many things you can do by using the chords in a scale, both for composing songs and for creating great solos. But in order to be able to do them, you need to...

  5. Dec 2, 2015 · Figuring out the chords in a key is simply a matter of stacking 3rds on each of the seven notes of the Major scale, to produce seven chords. Let’s take the C Major scale for example. C – D – E – F – G – A – B

  6. The chords alone won't always tell the full story, for instance, a chord progression containing only the chords F, C and Dmin could belong to the key of F major or C major. Let's begin by understanding how a bunch of different chords can all belong to one scale.

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