Did you have any idea how easy it is to learn ALL the major Chords (there are 12 of them) and be able to play them in seconds -- not hours or days or weeks or months or years?
Some people go through their entire lives not being sure about what such and such a major chord is -- and it's all so unnecessary, because you can memorize them in just a few minutes, and learn to play them in 12 seconds or less - one second per major chord.
I have had many private students over the years who could play them all in as little as 5 seconds -- one little gal (she was about 12 at the time) had particularly fast hands, and could play them in - believe it or not - 3 seconds! I have slow hands with fat fingers, and yet I can play them in something like 5 or 6 seconds. So if I can do it with little fat hands and chubby short fingers, you can too.
First, here's what the major Chords are made of:
C chord: C, E, G
F chord: F, A, C
G chord: G, B, D
D cho rd: D, F#, A
E chord: E, G#, B
A chord: A, C#, E
Db chord: Db, F, Ab
Eb chord: Eb, G, Bb
Ab chord: Ab, C, Eb
Bb chord: Bb, D, B
B chord: B, D#, F#
Gb chord: Gb, Bb, Db
I hope you noticed that 3 of the major Chords were made of all white keys: C F G. And I hope you noticed that 3 of the major Chords were made of white keys on the outside, with a black key in the middle: D E A. And did you notice that 3 of the major Chords were like an Oreo cookie? Black on the outside, white on the inside? Db Eb Ab. That only leaves 3 major Chords, one of which is all black, and one of which is white, black, black, and the other the reverse -- black, white, white. Gb (all black) B (white, black, black) Bb (black, white, white). And that's it..
Why is it that some Chords have black keys (sharps or flats) and others don't? It's because all major Chords are formed by playing the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of a major scale. So if the C ma jor scale is C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C (and it is),then by playing the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the scale the major chord is C, E, G.
If the B major scale is B, C#, D#, E, F#, G#, A#, B (and it is), then by playing the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the scale the B major chord is B, D#, F#.
That's because of the rule of whole steps and half steps that all major scales must follow: W, W, H, W, W, W, H. That creates different flats and sharps in each scale, which in turn creates different chord formations for each major chord.
Practice playing the first 3 major Chords over and over until you can move between them smoothly and quickly. Then practice the next 3 major Chords -- then the next 3 -- then the last 3. After you can play them by 3's, practice playing the first 6 without stopping. Then practice the first 9 without stopping. Then finally practice playing all 12 without stopping.
There's no particular virtue, of course, in playing them quickly, except f or the fact that it makes you confident you can find them in a hurry when you need them in a song. But you'll find that as your confidence grows, your enjoyment and competence in Piano playing will grow commensurately.
Duane Shinn is the author of the popular free 101-week online e-mail newsletter titled http://www.playPiano.com/ Amazing Secrets Of Exciting Piano Chords & Sizzling Chord Progressions- Intelligent Piano Lessons For Adults Only! with over 84,400 current subscribers.
Author:: Duane Shinn
Keywords:: Chords, Piano, major Chords
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