question: another video i watched about drop voicings stated that the inversion a drop voiced chord is considered to be in is determined by the note that is in the highest voice. e.g. a chord with the 7th at the top would be in root position since that is where a 7th would be in a closed voiced root position chord (think root-3rd-5th-7th). i notice you seem to be deeming a chord as a certain inversion based rather on the note in the bass. is that other video totally wrong? is this a matter of just seeing things in two totally valid ways?
I just found one major piece that is missing in my guitar play.... Thank you and you teach very well
Thank you!
Great info! Thank you!
Cheers!
Very useful stuff….thanks a lot 👍🍷
No problem!
Amazing!
Thanks!
thank you,man! but why is it called drop 2 ? )
No worries! Hard to explain on a YT comment but it means dropping the 2nd highest note in a 1357 down an octave to create an inversion
question: another video i watched about drop voicings stated that the inversion a drop voiced chord is considered to be in is determined by the note that is in the highest voice. e.g. a chord with the 7th at the top would be in root position since that is where a 7th would be in a closed voiced root position chord (think root-3rd-5th-7th). i notice you seem to be deeming a chord as a certain inversion based rather on the note in the bass. is that other video totally wrong? is this a matter of just seeing things in two totally valid ways?
It’s good to see them both ways
The "nerts"🤣🤣🤣
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