[realmusicians] Re: Guitar question.
- From: Tom Kingston <tom.kingston@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: realmusicians@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2012 20:45:08 -0500
Okay. Luckily I was able to find it. And it's C to G, not G to C. Not
that the direction would matter. At least that's my ignorant theory.
grin. So I snipped it out of the file and attached it. If this list
doesn't accept attachments I'll send it to you. Oh, and this is also
capoed at (I think) the forth fret.
Thanks for the help.
Tom
On 1/29/2012 7:43 PM, Tom Kingston wrote:
Thanks Chris,
Yeah, I've heard about pivot points and relational moves from everyone
and their brother. But this was a definite tonal walk from G to C. I'll
have to search through my pile of files and see if I can track it down.
It's probably something you do without even thinking about it. But we'll
see. At least if I can find it.
Thanks again.
Tom
On 1/29/2012 6:10 PM, Chris Belle wrote:
I think this means not moving your fingers more than you have to, like
if your fingers for the next cord are already on the right string, leave
them there, or figure ou the last movement you can to change cords.
It depends on the cord in question, but when you analyze it movement by
movement, yu'll see what's going on.
At 05:03 PM 1/29/2012, you wrote:
I've been pouring over YouTube video lessons and a couple folks
mentioned the typical everyone knows how to do it quote, squeeze, from
a G to C chord. I think it's a pair of partials to move from one to
the other.
Anyone know this magic trick? I'm pretty sure I downloaded one of the
files wherein it was mentioned. So I can search for it and just cut
that part out if it would help.
Thanks,
Tom
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