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How to Transpose

Lesson 11/71 | Study Time: 5 Min
How to Transpose

How to Transpose

If the sheet music is in the key of E flat (Eb) major and contains difficult chord shapes, you can transpose it to another major key with easier chord shapes. Keys that contain easy shapes for beginners are C major and G major, or if the song is in a minor key, A minor (Am)or E minor (Em).

Write down the chromatic scale of the key the sheet music is in (usually the first chord is the key chord). Then underneath it write down the chromatic scale of the key you wish to change to, e.g., to change a song from the key of Eb to the key of G, write down the chromatic scale starting with the note Eb and then underneath it write down the chromatic scale starting on the note G.

The letter name of the chord is written on the top line and the letter name of the new chord in the new key (in this case G) will be directly underneath it.

Note that the chord type never changes. If the chord is a minor chord in the key of Eb major it will also be a minor chord in the major key it is transposed to.

  • e.g., an Eb chord in the key of Eb major becomes a G chord in the key of G major.
  • e.g., an Ab chord in the key of Eb major becomes a C chord in the key of G major.
  • e.g., a Cm chord in the key of Eb major becomes an Em chord in the key of G major.
  • e.g., a Bbm chord in the key of Eb major becomes a Dm chord in the key of G major.

The easiest keys for guitar are:
G major, C major, D major, A major, E major, A minor and E minor. These keys contain chords that have open strings in them and are generally easier shapes to hold.

Gary Turner

Gary Turner

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Class Sessions

1- Eighth Note Triplet Rhythms 2- F Major Chord 3- B Minor Chord 4- Minor Chords 5- Silent Strums and Continuous Rhythm 6- Eighth Note Rhythms 7- Suspended Chords 8- A Major Chord 9- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns 10- Alternative Chord Shapes 11- Rock Chords 12- LESSON ONE 13- Sixteenth Note Rhythms 14- Augmented Chords 15- INTRODUCTION 16- GLOSSARY OF MUSICAL TERMS 17- Chord Chart 18- How to Tune Your Guitar 19- Major Seventh Chords 20- Staccato Strumming 21- Rhythm Rests 22- Minor Seventh Chords 23- Major Sixth Chords 24- Alternate Bass Note Picking 25- Rhythm Rests and Eighth Note Strum Combinations 26- Diminished Chords 27- Silent Strum Rhythm Variations 28- Tuning to Another Instrument 29- More titles by LearnToPlayMusic.com 30- Chord Symbols 31- Arpeggio Playing 32- Turnaround Progressions 33- New Topic 34- <span class="symbolA">^</span> Time Rhythm Patterns 35- Eighth Note Rhythm Patterns 36- Slide Finger 37- The C Major Chord 38- Alternative Chord Fingerings 39- Approach to Practice 40- Tuning the Guitar to Itself 41- Combining Strumming And Arpeggio Patterns 42- The Seventh Chord 43- Bass Note Rhythm Patterns 44- 12 Bar Blues 45- Chord Progressions 46- Electronic Tuner 47- Tuning Hints 48- Rhythm Patterns 49- Notes on the Guitar Fretboard 50- Acoustic Guitars 51- Open Chord Shapes 52- The Chromatic Scale 53- Electric Guitars 54- Electric Guitars (played through an amplifier) 55- Guitar Fretboard 56- Amplifiers 57- How to Read Sheet Music 58- Strings 59- Easy Chord Table 60- Seating 61- How to Transpose 62- The Pick 63- The Capo 64- Right Arm Position 65- 12 Bar Blues 66- The Rudiments of Music 67- Turnarounds 68- Note Values 69- Notes, Rhythms and Rests 70- Chord Diagrams 71- Rhythm Symbols

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