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Here is my attempt at The Defector by The Space Cossacks.
Its the lead guitar only, and as usual, the solo is omitted :)
Feedback and help is appreciated. Missing is the rhythm guitar, the "click"
track guitar, and I could not for the life of me figure out the final chord.
You can get it from here:
or here:
I'll send a copy to Ivan and perhaps he can fill us in on a few parts :)
Thanks,
BN
Brian Neal wrote:
>
> Here is my attempt at The Defector by The Space Cossacks.
>
> Feedback and help is appreciated. Missing is the rhythm guitar, the "click"
> track guitar, and I could not for the life of me figure out the final chord.
Its the old E minor maj7 9 chord and looks something like this:
|2 (high E string)
|0
|0
|1
|2
|0 (high E string)
It has a friend here:
|-
|7
|8
|9
|10
|0
ferenc
--- In SurfGuitar101@y..., Ferenc Dobronyi <ferenc@p...> wrote:
>> Brian Neal wrote:
>> I could not for the life of me figure out the final chord.
>
> Its the old E minor maj7 9 chord and looks something like this:
>
> |2 (high E string)
> |0
> |0
> |1
> |2
> |0 (high E string)
>
Thanks Ferenc!
I knew I heard the 9th in there (F# on the high E).
Let me get this straight...a "normal" 7th for an E chord would be a
D. But major 7th means raise it up to D#/Eb, right?
Thanks again,
BN (learning chord theory)
Thanks for the tab, wooooooooooooo hoooooooooooooooo!
yup, you have clean (or perfect, in english i believe) intervals, 1st 4th
5th and 8th,
then you have the minor/mojor intervals 2nd, 3th 6th and 7th. both major 2nd
(translates to 9th) and minor 7th are usually just referred to as "normal" 2
or7th
uh, normal chords are built up by putting thirds on top of eachother,
(within a particular scale), so you'd have 1-3-5-7, or a 1-3-5-7-9, and so
on.
the 9-chord should have a 7th as well, therefore..
the chords are made from notes of a scale. notes are all derrived from Am or
C-major scale, pitched higher or lower with # or b-es... uh, you can only
use every note once. Since you already have the E in the E-chord, the Eb
can not exist. Eb is lowered E, not a dropped D. in this particular chord
its a D#, therefore. (or in adifferent context it could be an Fb chord, no
kidding, and then it would be a dropped E....)
this all sounds silly to us with piano-like instruments, but musicians with
pitch adjusting instruments like violin, cello trombone trumpet etc will
play the D# slightly lower then the Eb. the black keys on a piano are
really a compromise, weird huh?
not to sure how it all works in terms of physics though.
WR (i just love musical theory)
>From: "Brian" <>
>Reply-To:
>To:
>Subject: [SurfGuitar101] Re: "The Defector" Tab
>Date: Tue, 05 Nov 2002 13:30:27 -0000
>
>--- In SurfGuitar101@y..., Ferenc Dobronyi <ferenc@p...> wrote:
> >> Brian Neal wrote:
> >> I could not for the life of me figure out the final chord.
> >
> > Its the old E minor maj7 9 chord and looks something like this:
> >
> > |2 (high E string)
> > |0
> > |0
> > |1
> > |2
> > |0 (high E string)
> >
>
>Thanks Ferenc!
>
>I knew I heard the 9th in there (F# on the high E).
>
>Let me get this straight...a "normal" 7th for an E chord would be a
>D. But major 7th means raise it up to D#/Eb, right?
>
>Thanks again,
>
>BN (learning chord theory)
>
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Ferenc Dobronyi wrote:
>
> Its the old E minor maj7 9 chord and looks something like this:
>
> |2 (high E string)
> |0
> |0
> |1
> |2
> |0 (high E string)
It was late, and I made an error which I am sure you caught but for the
record it should be:
|2 (high E string)
|0
|0
|1
|2
|0 (low E string)
fd
PS- While we are at it, this is the most beautiful chord ever:
You can call it an E69 (huh, huh...)
|12 (high E string)
|12
|11
|11
|11
|0 (low E string)
> PS- While we are at it, this is the most beautiful chord ever:
> You can call it an E69 (huh, huh...)
>
> |12 (high E string)
> |12
> |11
> |11
> |11
> |0 (low E string)
Or...
|7 (high E)
|7
|6
|6
|7
|0
...if you want a lower E6/9
Mike ;-}