Friday, April 10, 2015

Minor Triads

Last we looked at Major Triads and Inversions. The next step would be to introduce the Minor triad. To play a minor triad from the major triad, all you have to do is flat the 3rd of your root chord like this:



C(1)-E(3)-G(5)  (C-Major triad)



C(1)-Eb(3b)-G(5) (C-Minor triad)

Remember that 1-3-5 is based on the number system as explained in another article

From this you can invert the root like this:


Eb-G-C

G-C-Eb

Look below to see in real time:


The most important thing to understand when it comes to playing in a minor key is that "for every minor key, you have a relative major key that you play". This means that if you can master the major key than you can automatically play the minor key.

In a major key, your 6th tone will always be the relative minor of that key. So in the above example, C-minor is the 6th tone for Eb-major, therefore your relative major key is Eb.

So when a song starts with C-Minor you can actually start playing in Eb Major, but the only difference is that you start the song on the 6th tone and not with the normal 1 chord (Eb-major). Here is an example of how it would sound within a song context:

2 comments:

  1. Hi Jemaine, the first video in this post is private and cannot be veiwed :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Matthew. Good to hear from you! Thanks for pointing that out. I've made it public. Sorry for only getting back now. I had a issue with my comments section.

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