This is where knowing basic chord progressions works really well. No capo needed get a chord chart with all the keys and practice playing different keys with open chords.
I get the point, but this really isnāt true, is it? I can play the G-Em-C-D Axis of Awesome progression, but I canāt play thousands of songs or even dozens. Beyond learning how to play those 4 chords in a row, Iād have to do this:
- Know which songs use that progression.
- Most of those songs donāt use only that progression. I might have to learn different progressions for the bridge, chorus, etc. for all those songs.
- Iād have to learn the lyrics to thousands of songs.
- Iād have to learn the song structure: how many verses, chorus, where the bridge(s) are, intro, outro. Etc.
- Iād have to learn a strumming pattern or groove, which can be quite different for different songs.
Of course, learning the I-V-iv-IV progression is very useful, especially when you can start to recognize it when you hear it. But letās stop saying that learning a 4-chord progression will add many songs to your repertoire. Itās a good first step.
Itās all about learning how to play the guitar. You can learn song or you can learn how music is constructed. Itās up to you. I prefer to learn how music is constructed.
Thatās a really good point and one which Iām going to take on board this year. Thanks Rick.
@Richard_close2u perhaps we can have ālearn songs, learn songs, learn songs and take note of how there is a similarity in their constructionā. Cue a Vintage Club lesson.
Uuhā¦ What a great idea and most thrilling topic @sairfingers. If there ever will be such a session @richard_close2u. If there would ever be such a session, could I please get an invite?
Or both!
And you could have a āhomeworkā assignment, asking people to bring a list of a couple of songs that use one of the standard chord progressions
FWIW I just stripped this out of my Practice Schedule Spreadsheet and highlighted the open chords to help less experienced folk here. For F if barre chords are beyond you Fmaj7 will set you straight.
And if anyone spots an error please shout up, as it was done a while back and I canāt recall checking it thoroughly !
Excellent chart Toby.
Hi Gordon, thanks for starting this thread as weāre all getting very interesting input for our practice. I was reflecting on my guitar goals recently - well I think many of us did the same! - and I happened to think that being a Campfire guitar player might actually not be my cup of tea at the momentā¦of course I would love it, who wouldnāt? But it feels too difficult for me. I can play soo many childrenās tunes with just C and G from memoryā¦well I can still do it if a third chord is added, but if it starts being a 4 chords song my ear struggles to be prompt and recognize to which of the chords I need to switch. If itās pop or rock or whatever (not childrenās tunes) itās even harder as I donāt have as yet the tools to add all the dynamics and the cool stuff my musical imagination suggests! Much Food for Thought for me from other peopleā s repliesā¦
Ps: Iām glad to read you had a good time sharing your guitar with your family!
Toby, could you share the file so that we can print it out? Pleaaaseee
Iāll see if I can extract that one worksheet and drop it into a document on its own.
In the key of B a biggie
greetings
@Silvia80 and anyone who may be interested. Link to my Google Drive added here.
https://community.justinguitar.com/t/common-chord-progressions/2837/41
Thanks Toby I managed to download it!
For the second year in a row, we have had successful holiday singalongs by screen sharing the Justin Songs App to a big screen smart TV (Roku).
Great for guitar players and singers alike!
Also, my girlfriendās daughter impressed the hell out of me by playing along on an extra guitarā¦even though she only plays ukulele.
Between the visible chord diagrams and slowing the tempo, she was able to keep up quite credibly on an unfamiliar instrument.
But I wasnāt at all envious of her natural talent - uh, uh - not me!
Glad youāve found your solution to the singalong issue Tom. I donāt subscribe to the app so not a path open to me.
Also great that youāve converted someone to guitar!
Following on from @TheMadman_tobyjenner spreadsheet a few posts back, Iāve now come across this Community post. Itās a long one but lots in it.
Common Chord Progressions
Iāll also highlight @stitch Axis of Awesome video.
Iām late to this party ā¦
Within my mantra are many paths / depths / meanings / interpretations / applications.
Perhaps it could be worth shaking the mantra tree to see what comes out and making much of it explicit.