A full D9 chord contains a D7 within it. In other words, a D9 is a D7 with one more note added. Note that guitarists don't usually play all the notes in a 9th chord; they usually leave out the 5th degree, etc.
@aster41 A D9 chord contains the notes D F# A C E. The first 4 of these notes are notes of the D7 chord. With chords like this with many notes, it is customary to eliminate the 5th degree (A in this case) for convenience because the 5th is not needed for the chord's unique sound. I don't know why you are talking about C/F.
That moveable 9th chord has such a lovely sound!
Thank you for John Part, and George’s outro!!! I’m keep practicing the way you are showing it
Beautiful waited long for this especially the bass tab thanks✌️
This is amazing cover, thankyou!🤘🏼
Thx for the lesson! I’m a novice, so I have a question, does it make musical sense when George plays a D9 over John’s D7? Please no yelling! 😅
A full D9 chord contains a D7 within it. In other words, a D9 is a D7 with one more note added.
Note that guitarists don't usually play all the notes in a 9th chord; they usually leave out the 5th degree, etc.
@@codetech5598 Got it, very clear explanation, thank you very much!
@ch5598 are you sure? and according to Google, most guitarists struggle with the "C/F" (C over F) chord
@aster41 A D9 chord contains the notes D F# A C E. The first 4 of these notes are notes of the D7 chord.
With chords like this with many notes, it is customary to eliminate the 5th degree (A in this case) for convenience because the 5th is not needed for the chord's unique sound.
I don't know why you are talking about C/F.
Had it in my head yesterday, how fitting!
Brilliant.Brings back memories from the sixties
que efecto usa para la guitarra 2?
Excellent Job!
So what happened to all the D Maj7`s?
Thank you
Really cool use of the slide
😊
🙂 *promosm*
thank youuu
Good!
Nice job
Pesima