- Stumble >
Chords
-
linjam
linjam
7,227 Favs
-
honeysuck
honeysuck
2,010 Favs
-
Justinsane8000
Justin...
13K Favs
-
trickiikitty
tricki...
25K Favs
-
salientdetails
salien...
3,352 Favs
-
karenemelgar
karene...
2,769 Favs
-
Burgerbob22
Burger...
9,281 Favs
-
DaGreeksWife
DaGree...
1,006 Favs
-
thinkmario
thinkm...
1,800 Favs
-
chitabanana16
chitab...
1,807 Favs
-
where has this been all my life! the name your own chord feature is great! Joni Mitchell here I come. (everything below was added for the purposes of my archives many posts at the beginning of my blog have been altered since their first posting to use in the... more
-
AFFECTIVE KEY CHARACTERISTICS
C Major Completely Pure. Its character is: innocence, simplicity, naïvety, children's talk. C Minor Declaration of love and at the same time the lament of unhappy love. All languishing, longing, sighing of the love-sick soul lies in this key. Db Major A leering... more
-
chord house ::: piano room: chords and scales
This tool is a limited piano equivalent of the guitar chord and scale finders that play various voicingsexcept no voicings (but plenty of keyboard voices)! Still, guitarists as well as pianists can benefit from this version, though it always starts on a root with keyboard... more
-
-
Piano Chords and Scales made easy
piano chords and scales, excellent thank you Scotpk http://scotpk.stumbleupon.com/
-
chordbook.com - interactive guitar resource
been looking for some good tracks to jam to on the guitar. This site go's for quality not quantity.
-
Four Chords, 36 Songs - CollegeHumor video
From the page: "I can't believe how many bands ripped-off Journey, even The Beatles!" You mean you can't believe how many bands, including Journey, ripped off Pachelbel's Canon in D. That's what you meant, right?
-
VÃdeo - The Axis of Awesome - 4 Chords
this is for all those music theory geeks in the world, like me. Really interesting since these are popular songs.
-
circle of 5ths text
From the page: "Note that at the 6:00 position, there are two notes -- F# and Gb. These, of course, are enharmonic notes -- they sound exactly the same and are the same. Their names are different only because they are reached from different directions."
-
