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Re: Ronnie vs. Taylor: chord tones
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: October 5, 2018 18:45

BS with Adam Bomb - amazing guitar pharsing

[www.youtube.com]


Heaven Come To Me with Mick Taylor

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IORR

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Re: Ronnie vs. Taylor: chord tones
Posted by: schillid ()
Date: October 6, 2018 21:08

Quote
DandelionPowderman
Chord tones or chord notes?

When I hear the word "tone" applied to chords --- especially on guitar -- I think about tonal qualities like Fat, thin, tinny sound... etc. Things based on volume, treble, bass and midrange. Which is a different concept than what people are discussing here... melody, arpeggios, etc.

I'd refer to it as "scales" or "notes" instead of the word "tone"... just to avoid that confusion...

Re: Ronnie vs. Taylor: chord tones
Posted by: TravelinMan ()
Date: October 6, 2018 23:52

Quote
schillid
Quote
DandelionPowderman
Chord tones or chord notes?

When I hear the word "tone" applied to chords --- especially on guitar -- I think about tonal qualities like Fat, thin, tinny sound... etc. Things based on volume, treble, bass and midrange. Which is a different concept than what people are discussing here... melody, arpeggios, etc.

I'd refer to it as "scales" or "notes" instead of the word "tone"... just to avoid that confusion...

And that’s the confusion of the word tone. For instance, dial tone, it is a single tone, or note. In chord tone, same thing, a note that belongs to the chord.

It’s American English, welcome to the most confusing language.

Re: Ronnie vs. Taylor: chord tones
Date: October 7, 2018 00:51

Quote
schillid
Quote
DandelionPowderman
Chord tones or chord notes?

When I hear the word "tone" applied to chords --- especially on guitar -- I think about tonal qualities like Fat, thin, tinny sound... etc. Things based on volume, treble, bass and midrange. Which is a different concept than what people are discussing here... melody, arpeggios, etc.

I'd refer to it as "scales" or "notes" instead of the word "tone"... just to avoid that confusion...

Same here.

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