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Arpeggios Squared

by Matthew Brown (9249)

Pages: 1 2 3 4 Suggested Tempo: 70

Just as you can play inversions of triads, you can play inversions of seventh chords. This lesson will teach you the fingerings of the inversions of a G Major 7 chord. The same fingerings can be applied to any major seventh chord. An inversion is just that: a chord turned on its head. But in a seventh chord, which has 4 notes in it (Root, 3rd,5th, and 7th), the chord can have as its bottom note any of its four notes. The following example plays each inversion of a G Major 7th as an arpeggio. Listen carefully, and then learn the fingerings on the next page.
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