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Dominant seventh flat ninth chord

Started by alanclare, June 23, 2018, 11:33:17 AM

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alanclare

What's the best way to play one of these on a PSR arranger? It consists of five notes and the span from first to flattened ninth is too big for my hands. I always play an added ninth chord by adding the second instead, but flattening the second doesn't sound right.

Alan

mikf

Alan
It is not really practical to play these chords in your lh, even for a very good player. I play 7b9ths a lot but usually use full keyboard so I finger across both hands. But you can also get it sounding pretty good by fingering a simple lh chord, and adding note to your rh to sound the chord. These chords are usually short duration passing chords so it comes out fine to the ear which is what matters.
Mike

alanclare

Mike

Thank you for your informative reply which seemed to come back almost as soon as I'd finished asking the question!

Alan

whataguy

Drop the root and play it in the 2nd inversion. Don in MI

andyg

7b9 chords are easily done in AI Fingered mode. Played with what might best be described as a 'cluster' of notes, close together.

Examples: D7b9 - C D Eb F#   G7b9 = F G Ab B

You're omitting the 5th when you play these chords, so the others should be easy enough to work out.


It's not what you play, it's not how you play. It's the fact that you're playing that counts.

www.andrew-gilbert.com

alanclare

My thanks to all three of you. I shall take these suggestions and try them out, once I've irganised some ice to cool my fevered brow.

Alan

alanclare

Andy

I can see how your suggestion will work. Does the screen actually display seventh flattened ninth when you use that fingering?

Alan

whataguy

Hey Alan just replace the chord with "R" major, it works for everything. D.

andyg

Quote from: alanclare on June 23, 2018, 02:03:52 PM
Andy

I can see how your suggestion will work. Does the screen actually display seventh flattened ninth when you use that fingering?

Alan
Oops, a bit late with the reply, but yes it will display the chord name correctly.
It's not what you play, it's not how you play. It's the fact that you're playing that counts.

www.andrew-gilbert.com

alanclare

Andy

Thank you. "Better late than never", as my old Ma used to say.

Alan

whataguy

The chord in question, when it does appear in a score, only appears for one or two notes in ONE measure. That being noted, it would seem that it would be far easier to just cough or glance at the ceiling for that short period of time. Who'd know? Don in MI

alanclare

I prefer the "R" major technique. I feels more natural.

Al

whataguy


alanclare