I was wondering if anyone has an easy chord chart for a beginner lap player ? C6 tuning and/or C6/A7 tuning
I guess I would compare it to like those guitar chord posters they make with all the basic major/minor/7/sus chords and bar chords for people to have hanging on their walls
Lap Steel C6 and/or C6/A7 Easy Chord Chart ?
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- Tommy Kessler
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Use ChordAlchemy or John Ely's Chord Generator and make your own. You actually learn whilst doing it.
www.ukuke.co.uk
Rickie B6 and Ace, 'Jerry Byrd' Frypan. National 'New Yorker', Harbor Lights Frypan. Guyatone D8 etc.
Rickie B6 and Ace, 'Jerry Byrd' Frypan. National 'New Yorker', Harbor Lights Frypan. Guyatone D8 etc.
- Steve Lipsey
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Yeah...kind of strange that it doesn't exist...I made my own...
I found this C6 fretboard chart helpful, you can easily see straight and slant chords just by looking at it:
http://www.amazon.com/Steel-Guitar-Fret ... B002P6NVNA
There is also an 8-string version of this.
I found this C6 fretboard chart helpful, you can easily see straight and slant chords just by looking at it:
http://www.amazon.com/Steel-Guitar-Fret ... B002P6NVNA
There is also an 8-string version of this.
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THINGS I've heard.....................
I've read on this SGF that the JERRY BYRD Instructional Manual for Serious Minded players was really the best way to go.
You have the guy that made C6th/A7th the backbone of his playing/style for many, many years explaining in a factual and easy to understand manner how to get the ultimate out of this tuning. WHAT MORE could an aspiring player desire?
The JERRYBYRD-FANCLUB.com/ has a lot of songs to hear how full that tuning can be.
You have the guy that made C6th/A7th the backbone of his playing/style for many, many years explaining in a factual and easy to understand manner how to get the ultimate out of this tuning. WHAT MORE could an aspiring player desire?
The JERRYBYRD-FANCLUB.com/ has a lot of songs to hear how full that tuning can be.
- Tommy Kessler
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Re: THINGS I've heard.....................
Thanks for the info. I'll look into Jerry's lessonsS.M. Johnson wrote:I've read on this SGF that the JERRY BYRD Instructional Manual for Serious Minded players was really the best way to go.
You have the guy that made C6th/A7th the backbone of his playing/style for many, many years explaining in a factual and easy to understand manner how to get the ultimate out of this tuning. WHAT MORE could an aspiring player desire?
The JERRYBYRD-FANCLUB.com/ has a lot of songs to hear how full that tuning can be.
Funny, I think I found the exact same "poster" when I did a google images search !Steve Lipsey wrote:Yeah...kind of strange that it doesn't exist...I made my own...
I found this C6 fretboard chart helpful, you can easily see straight and slant chords just by looking at it:
http://www.amazon.com/Steel-Guitar-Fret ... B002P6NVNA
There is also an 8-string version of this.
Really liked John Ely's Chord Generator, that's basically what I was looking for !Ray Shakeshaft wrote:Use ChordAlchemy or John Ely's Chord Generator and make your own. You actually learn whilst doing it.