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Similar to Musicademy Playing by Ear in Worship (20)
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Musicademy Playing by Ear in Worship
- 1. Playing By Ear
When you hear a new song do you wish you
could just play the right chords by ear,
without the music in front of you?
In this session we go
through a simple three
step formula that will
help you work out the
right chords for any
song in any key.
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- 2. About Musicademy
• The Musicademy team
DVDs
Guitar, Vocals, Keys
Drums, Bass, Orchestral
• Worship Backing band
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- 3. For seminar notes, please add your
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You’ll also get our (rather good)
weekly Worship Newsletter
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- 4. Defining a Key
• Pieces of music are defined according to their “key”.
Hosanna is in the key of G major.
• Each key is made up of a series of individual notes
(referred to as a scale) that all “fit with” the melody,
harmony and chords of the song without jarring on the ear.
• However, there is one note in each scale which seems to fit
the song more than any other.
It is often referred to as the note that sounds like the
“home”, or most comfortable note that can be played all the
way through the song and seems to fit all the time.
This note is called the “Root” note.
The root of Hosanna is G. This is why that song is in the
key of G.
• Hosanna is in G major. Major scales or keys sound
“happy” and minor scales sound “sad”.
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- 5. How to find the ‘key’ of
a song on your guitar
• Whilst listening to a piece of music play each fret of the first string
(high E). Start with the open E note and work your way up evenly to
around fret 13 and then back down again. Don’t miss out any frets!
• Find the note which seems to fit most comfortably over every chord
change and note of the song. That note will be the ‘key’ the song is
in.
• Sometimes you may find two, or even three notes that work well.
These are because you have found some notes that are contained
within the key.
• So in the key of G, you may have found the C, the D, and the G
notes which all fit quite well.
• However, if you play all those options again over the song then one
of those notes will definitely sound more ‘home’ than the others.
This note is also known as the ‘root’ note of the key.
• This is the first stage of being able to work out any chord or part for
any song you choose to. This process is known as transcribing.
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- 6. Step 1-The Major Scale
• The Major Scale is the backbone of music theory.
Most other melodic and harmonic information is explained in
terms of how it relates to the scale.
• Two distances between notes – the tone and the semitone.
A jump of a semitone is moving one fret up or down on the
guitar
A jump of a tone is moving two frets up or down– the
equivalent of two semitones.
• A major scale is recognized by the singing of the song Do,
Ra Me ….
• Work out how many ‘steps’ between Do, (sung low) and Do,
(sung high)
• There are always ……. notes in any major scale.
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- 7. The 3 Major Scale Rules
Rule 1
• There is one of every alphabetical letter between A and
G - the musical alphabet.
There are never two of the same letter in the same
scale. E.g. You wont find Bb and B together in a key.
Rule 2
• You never miss out any letters.
• E.g. A scale will never go ABCDEF, missing D.
Rule 3
• You never mix sharps (#)and flats (b) together in the
same key.
• Eg. A scale will never go A, Bb, C, D#, E, F#, G
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- 8. Working out notes
in the Major Scale
• Lets not worry about putting in the sharps and
flats at this stage, just write out what the correct
alphabetical letters are in each of the following
keys.
• C
• F
• A
• G
• B
• D
• E
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- 9. Step 2 - TTsTTTs
• The major scale is built up from a series of tones and semitones
in this order:
Root Tone Tone semitone Tone Tone Tone semitone
Which we will abbreviate to:
R TTsTTTs
• If we start on the note C this would give us this series of notes
C D E F G A B C
R T T s T T T S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1
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- 10. TTsTTTs
• With the key of G
G A B C D E F# G
R T T s T T T S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1
• With the key of F
F G A Bb C D E F
R T T s T T T S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1
• By following that simple formula of tones and semitones, you will be
able to discover the correct notes of any major scale.
It doesn’t matter which note it starts on. It could be E, Bb, A# etc etc.
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- 11. TTsTTTs
• When we name notes in the major scale, there are
three familiar rules:
Rule 1
• You must use every alphabetical letter from A through
to G
Rule 2
• There must be only one of each letter e.g. you can’t
have Db and D in the same scale it would have to be
C# and D
Rule 3
• We never mix sharps and flats in the same scale
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- 12. Step 3
Chords within the key
• Each major scale or key has a series of seven notes that all fit
together melodically over the song. In addition to this, there are also
seven chords that fit within each major key.
The chords themselves are all made up from individual notes taken
from the relevant major scale. The formula for the chords looks like
this:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1(8)
Major Minor Minor Major Major Minor Minor Major
(½ diminished)
• If we line up our notes in a major scale as before, the chords we find
may seem quite familiar in certain keys.
For example, if you have played a song in the key of G, you may
remember that certain chords crop up regularly. For instance, G
Major, C Major, D Major, E minor.
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- 13. Chords within the key
• Lets work this formula into the chord table above and line up our
notes from the key of G major.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1(8)
G A B C D E F# G
Major Minor Minor Major Major Minor Minor Major
(½ diminished)
• As you can see, the chords of G major, C major, D major and E
minor fit right into our table of chords in the key. These being the
numbers of 1, 4, 5 and 6. You may also have played the chords of A
minor and B minor in songs within the key of G.
• This pattern of chords works with every major scale.
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- 14. Major Scale Chart
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Key Major Minor Minor Major Major Minor Minor
(1/2 diminished)
C C D E F G A B
D D E F# G
E E F# A
F C
G B
A
B E
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- 15. For Further Information
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Editor's Notes
- www.musicademy.co.uk © Musicademy 2007