Saturday, April 17, 2010

12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 1

Today we're starting a new mini series on 4 string dominant 7th chords. We'll cover 12 different inversion of these dominant 7th chords for guitar. These are great chords to learn, remember and use... why?

  • You'll be able to able to play any dominant 7th chord in any area of the neck. Chord changes sound better when they flow with good voice leading.
  • You can easily modify these chords to make minor 7th, major 7th, half diminished, altered, 9th chords and more
  • These chords are great for blues, funk, jazz and pop but can be used anywhere.
  • Learning and using these will improve your musicianship and make you a better guitarist.
Each of these chords is played on four adjacent strings. The first guitar chords in our series will be played on the top 4 strings. So here's our first inversion:
Dominant 7th Guitar Chord
G7 guitar chord


Here's the fingering for this guitar chord:
G7 guitar chord


This chord is a G7 and has its root note on the 3rd fret of the E string, but you can easily move it to other frets to transpose it.

Dominant 7th chords use the 1, 3, 5 and b7 notes of the major scale.
For a G7 chord, this is G, B, D and F.

Tune in tomorrow for the next in our series of 12 dominant 7th chords you should know.

Today we're starting a new mini series on 4 string dominant 7th chords. We'll cover 12 different inversion of these dominant 7th chords for guitar. These are great chords to learn, remember and use... why?
  • You'll be able to able to play any dominant 7th chord in any area of the neck. Chord changes sound better when they flow with good voice leading.
  • You can easily modify these chords to make minor 7th, major 7th, half diminished, altered, 9th chords and more
  • These chords are great for blues, funk, jazz and pop but can be used anywhere.
  • Learning and using these will improve your musicianship and make you a better guitarist.
Each of these chords is played on four adjacent strings. The first guitar chords in our series will be played on the top 4 strings. So here's our first inversion:
Dominant 7th Guitar Chord
G7 guitar chord


Here's the fingering for this guitar chord:
G7 guitar chord


This chord is a G7 and has its root note on the 3rd fret of the E string, but you can easily move it to other frets to transpose it.

Dominant 7th chords use the 1, 3, 5 and b7 notes of the major scale.
For a G7 chord, this is G, B, D and F.

Tune in tomorrow for the next in our series of 12 dominant 7th chords you should know.

Related Posts:

  • 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 4We carry on our series of Dominant 7th Guitar Chords today with the last of our dominant 7th inversions on the D, G, B and E strings.We've featured other dominant 7th guitar chords on the top 4 guitar strings here, here and h… Read More
  • 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 3Our next chord in our series of 12 Guitar Chords you should know is another G7 chord, this time with its root note on the guitar's B string. Here's the fingering for this guitar chord:This dominant chord uses the notes of G7… Read More
  • 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 6Inversion number 6: we're half way through our series of 12 Dominant 7th Chords every guitarist should know. Today's dominant 7th inversion is again on the middle four strings of the guitar and has its root note on the B stri… Read More
  • 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 5Carrying on our series of 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords you should know we move onto inversions on the middle four guitar strings. The next four chords all feature the same notes: G, B, D and F but in different inversions. H… Read More
  • 12 Dominant 7th Guitar Chords - Number 7Carrying on our series of 12 Dominant 7th Chords every guitarist should know, today we have a common inversion for 7th chords. Here's the fingering for this guitar chord:This chord has its root note on the A string and uses… Read More

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