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Bm relative chords
Bm relative chords




bm relative chords
  1. #Bm relative chords pdf
  2. #Bm relative chords full

If you like it better, there is a half step between the 2 and 3 notes, and the 5 and 6 notes. And between the 1 and 2 will be a whole step, the 2 and 3 a half, etc. Traditionally, minor keys will be built off the root note, thus Em will be the scale: E F# G A B C D E, and we can build the chords off of that minor scale. So they will share the same chords, because they are generally the same chord family. D and Bm are the same keys, C and Am, Eb and Cm, F and Dm, etc. In other words, G (I) and Em (vi) share the same key note signature: “one sharp”. As far as minor keys, the way I generally think about it is that the vi chord (the relative minor) of a major key shares the same key signature as the I of that key. Yes I am showing keys built off the major scale.

#Bm relative chords pdf

Look at the graphics below that show common chord families that beginning guitarists use (click to enlarge – or click the link below for a pdf version of this chart).

#Bm relative chords full

For a full chart of these Chord Families, click here: Chord Families. And these minor chords (ii, iii, and vi): Am, Bm, and Em. Thus the G Chord Family comprises these major chords (I, IV and V): G, C, and D. I call this the C Chord Family.įor the key of G (and any other key) we can apply the same approach to find our major and minor chords: I ii iii IV V vi vii(dim) G Am Bm C D Em F#dim From this point on I will omit the seventh chord, the diminished chord. The minor chords (ii, iii, and vi) are: Dm, Em, and Am. So we see that the major chords in the key of C are chords (I, IV and V): C, F, and G. Notice that for chords, we typically switch our numbers to Roman Numerals: uppercase for major chords, lower case for minor chords. Look at this chart of Chords for the Key of C: I ii iii IV V vi vii(dim) C Dm Em F G Am Bdim Some of the numbered notes represent major chords, some minor, but the seventh represents a ‘diminished’ chord. The fourth note ‘F’ represents the fourth chord F (major).

bm relative chords bm relative chords

For instance, the first note ‘C’ represents the first chord C (major). Looking again at the C major scale, with the numbered notes we have: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 C D E F G A B CĮach note can represent a specific chord in the key of C. Of more relevance to the guitar player are Chord Families, or what chords go together in the different keys.






Bm relative chords