Chord of the Moment Lesson by Kirk I've written several articles about the 'chord of the moment', and for good reason — it's all there really is when you're actually playing a tune. The song is a series of moments, you're always in one, and that moment's musical rules are dictated by the chord that was written into the tune by it's author. Realising this fact -- (a brief byword here: I never know which spelling to use in these articles, US or the rest of the World. Words like realise and center, realize and centre... maybe I'll mix them up and use both.) -- where was I? Realising this fact, that there is always only one chord to contend with at any given moment, gave me hope, as a beginner. There seemed to be so many chords to learn, but it struck me that at least they came one at a time, and if I devoted all my attention to the chord of the moment, at each and every moment, all would be well. My quest has always been to simplify, to strip away as much detail as possible, see the bare bones of the music first, and build it from there, like the way one those internet pictures load up, resolving to finer detail as they go. This how my mental picture loads (let's say I've been invited to sit in with a band and I've never heard the tune): I first determine the key by asking the guy next to me 'What key are we in?' My fret board adjusts itself for that key, for example, B flat. I won't give it all away here, because I want to sell more books, but I apply a simple visualisation trick to have my fretboard laid out in B flat from nut to butt. I'm now holding a B flat guitar. Next, my ear determines what kind of music we're playing and the details start getting filled in. If it's 'major' music, as in NOT blues, my mental image resolves one way. It includes the major seven note and the four note. It excludes the flat three. I can see where these notes are on the fret board, instantly, everywhere. It might take me a couple of seconds to name them as |