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Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > The Workings Of Music > Hiya All, just joined!


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Old April 18th, 2006
hugh jengine hugh jengine is offline
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Hiya All, just joined!

Hi folks, my name is Paul,
New to this so I hope I`ve posted this in the right place. Been messing around with guitars for a little while now and I`ve noticed occasionally in tabs two chords together with a foward slash like this... A/B, for example. can`t find anything that explains what you`re supposed to do with this, play A then B, slide from A to B ?? or what? Anyone could tell me I would be able to sleep at night again!
Many thanks, Paul.

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Old April 18th, 2006
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Kirk Lorange Kirk Lorange is offline
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Hi Paul ... welcome to GfB&B.

Those are called 'slash' chords, for obvious reasons.

The first letter is the chord, the second is the bass note to play under the chord.

A/B would not be one, really, but A/C# would. Or A/E. Usually, the 'non-root- bass note is one of the other two chord tones (the 3 or 5) but you can also put the 7 (A/G#) or flat 7 (A/G) under the chord too. What happens there is that the bass note actually turns the chord into a new chord: AMaj7 and A7 respectively, in this case.

Nothing to it!


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Old April 18th, 2006
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coldethyl coldethyl is offline
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Howdy Paul

Welcome aboard! This is a great site and I'm sure you'll really enjoy it here.

Neil


"Good Music is that which penetrates the ear with facility and quits the memory with difficulty" Thomas Beecham
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Old April 18th, 2006
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Hi Paul, Welcome.

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Old April 18th, 2006
737blues 737blues is offline
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Hi Paul, glad you asked that question. Now we both know ....

(yeah, I know Kirk, I should have known that by now .... )

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Old April 20th, 2006
hugh jengine hugh jengine is offline
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Hiya Everyone,
Had a little think about the explanation, yep, makes sense now.... yes it wasnt A/B in the "beware of darkness" tab, it was B/A, which does work!
Many thanks Kirk, Coldethyl, Allthumbs and 737blues!
Cheers, Paul.

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Old April 20th, 2006
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Hi Paul, welcome to the forum

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Old April 20th, 2006
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Kirk Lorange Kirk Lorange is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hugh jengine
Hiya Everyone,
Had a little think about the explanation, yep, makes sense now.... yes it wasnt A/B in the "beware of darkness" tab, it was B/A, which does work!
Many thanks Kirk, Coldethyl, Allthumbs and 737blues!
Cheers, Paul.
OK; B/A is really B7, with the b7 (the A note) acting as bass note in this inversion. Usually you see this when the bass note is part of a descending bass line.


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Old April 20th, 2006
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Greetings Paul welcome aboard

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Old April 22nd, 2006
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Hi there Paul

Welcome to the best guitar forum on the net..!!

Tracy


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Old April 26th, 2006
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scotty_b scotty_b is offline
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A/B is a common way to voice an 11th chord - for instance Robben Ford's versiopn of 'Help the Poor uses this harmony in it - though from memory it is Ab/Bb. John McLaughin and Scott Henderson both use that convention at times for an 11th chord.

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Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > The Workings Of Music > Hiya All, just joined!


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