Second is knowledge. In a PowerChord (X5) there is only two tones. That's where the 5 comes from, cuz a PowerChord is a "fifth" with means you take one tone, and go 5 whole tones forward and play that tone too. When you play them simultaneously you get the (X5) chord. In this case you play the tone F, and when you go 5 whole tones forward from that, you have your fifth-chord. The third finger is your octave, which is, in this case, the F just 1 octave higher.
@Krelle1911 well the notes in the chord are f,c,f and i disagree that there are only two notes as chords are 3 notes or more so the f5 will be 133, or the chord could also be called a csus4, if my third finger was going to be my octave then i would of put 1x3 as a tab but i haven't, look check any site and see what a 5th chord is
@theworldofguitars Haha, well actually I wont have to cause I already know. Im on 3rd year on the music conservatory so I do know what I am talking about. The chord is called "5" because its a fifth. And a fifth is two notes ONLY. The third you add is an octave to the F. If you add more notes to the fifth, you will get an F.
@Krelle1911 well it's not technically a chord if it has only two notes!! now the chord i am showing is an "F Power Chord" which holds the notes F,C and F or it can also be called C sus 4 but for this case i'm showing an F power Chord and that's correct as in any power chord you get the same note that's in unison but obviously doesn't follow a major or minor scale and the chord is called a 5th because it's the 5th note of the major scale
@theworldofguitars Yes, that is right. Technically it is not a chord, because the fifth-chords cant be defined as major og minor - or anything else for that matter.
And no, its is not a Csus4 - it would be in an open F chord - but then it is a fifth, the C is the fifth to the F and those two notes make the "undefinanle major/minor" F5.
The chord is a fifth because if you look on a piano, you'll have the "CDEFGAB" notes, and from the F to the C there is five whole tones.
hello right f5 chord hold the thickest string on the guitar known as the "low e" down on the 1st fret then hold the a and d string down on the 3rd fret, or the other way to play it is just don't hold down the d string and play two strings instead if that makes sense?
First of all - Tune ur damn guitar!
Second is knowledge. In a PowerChord (X5) there is only two tones. That's where the 5 comes from, cuz a PowerChord is a "fifth" with means you take one tone, and go 5 whole tones forward and play that tone too. When you play them simultaneously you get the (X5) chord. In this case you play the tone F, and when you go 5 whole tones forward from that, you have your fifth-chord. The third finger is your octave, which is, in this case, the F just 1 octave higher.
Krelle1911 2 weeks ago
@Krelle1911 well the notes in the chord are f,c,f and i disagree that there are only two notes as chords are 3 notes or more so the f5 will be 133, or the chord could also be called a csus4, if my third finger was going to be my octave then i would of put 1x3 as a tab but i haven't, look check any site and see what a 5th chord is
theworldofguitars 1 week ago
@theworldofguitars Haha, well actually I wont have to cause I already know. Im on 3rd year on the music conservatory so I do know what I am talking about. The chord is called "5" because its a fifth. And a fifth is two notes ONLY. The third you add is an octave to the F. If you add more notes to the fifth, you will get an F.
Krelle1911 1 week ago
@Krelle1911 well it's not technically a chord if it has only two notes!! now the chord i am showing is an "F Power Chord" which holds the notes F,C and F or it can also be called C sus 4 but for this case i'm showing an F power Chord and that's correct as in any power chord you get the same note that's in unison but obviously doesn't follow a major or minor scale and the chord is called a 5th because it's the 5th note of the major scale
theworldofguitars 1 week ago
@theworldofguitars Yes, that is right. Technically it is not a chord, because the fifth-chords cant be defined as major og minor - or anything else for that matter.
And no, its is not a Csus4 - it would be in an open F chord - but then it is a fifth, the C is the fifth to the F and those two notes make the "undefinanle major/minor" F5.
The chord is a fifth because if you look on a piano, you'll have the "CDEFGAB" notes, and from the F to the C there is five whole tones.
Krelle1911 1 week ago
@Krelle1911 * ...but WHEN it is a fifth..
Krelle1911 1 week ago
@Krelle1911 are you sure it can't be a csus4 variant i have a book and the website the guitar buzz both say it too?
theworldofguitars 1 week ago
@theworldofguitars I made this for ya. Hope you'll see what I mean. /watch?v=voybux7YT0E
Krelle1911 1 week ago
but it helps you out more if i just press f5 on my keyboard because that refreshes the page and gives you more views
superfag64 10 months ago
now im here pressing f5 on my keyboard
superfag64 10 months ago
@superfag64
hello right f5 chord hold the thickest string on the guitar known as the "low e" down on the 1st fret then hold the a and d string down on the 3rd fret, or the other way to play it is just don't hold down the d string and play two strings instead if that makes sense?
theworldofguitars 10 months ago