Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Unit 4: The F Chord

This chord is a beast to new players. The traditional voicing that appears in all the guitar instruction books involves holding down the first fret on the B and E strings at the same time. They call this a barre. It's hard for beginners to do this, so I don't require it- that's right.

Armed with the knowledge of chord theory, we diagram and spell the F chord and discover that the F note (root) is doubled in this voicing. One of the F's can be eliminated! This makes for greater comfort, and warm fuzzys about putting theory to good use.

The song that reinforced the F chord is "Saving Grace" by the Cranberries.

Another concept that comes up in Saving Grace is the use of the F chord as a G chord. Yes that's right. Since the F chord doesn't use open strings, we can slide it up a whole step and it becomes a G chord. If we went up another whole step it would be an A chord. Cool right?
Here's an example of me playing C,F and G (in the new position). It's the same chord progression to "Saving Grace", and lots of other songs- "La Bamba" for example.

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