Dmaj-scale = 1D 2E 3F# 4G 5A 6B 7C# 8D (9 is the same as 2, and 11 is the same as 4)
x = don't play it!
5 = 1 (of the D-major-scale)
4 = 3 (so there is no minor involved)
0 = 4 or 11 for that matter
3 = 1 or 8
0 = 2 or 9
Really fascinating to analyse all this stuff, but if you don't care, forget i said so!
ffsooo3 wrote:
Chasplaya wrote:Chas, If it's an Em9(no5) with out a capo and you then play it relative to a capo on the 2nd fret you are simply playing everything up 1 whole step (2 half steps). So the Em9(no5) is just a Dm9(no5). Likewise a C is actually a D, a G is actually an A, etc.lil40 wrote:To get the key the song is in originally. Em9(no5) could be the name although admittedly I get confused with the capo when I try to work the chords out lolThank you Chas, why is the capo important though? (Feeling really dumb...)
If you don't capo its in a different key and if you use the same shapes the chords are different names. I think lol
Someone help me out here I'm no great shakes on this theory thin lol