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Harmonizing Melodies

Lesson 6/81 | Study Time: 5 Min
Course: Rhythm Guitar
Harmonizing Melodies

Harmonizing Melodies

To harmonize a melody, you simply play a chord which contains a note from that melody on the first beat of each bar. In time, you could also add another chord on the third beat of the bar. There is always more than one chord which could be used, but some sound better than others. The more songs you learn and analyze, the easier it becomes to find the right chords to play. If you look at the scale and chords above, you will notice that the notes C and G appear in more than one of the chords. This means that if you were harmonizing a melody in the key of C, you could try both chords wherever one of these notes appear on the first beat of a bar. The following example shows a melody in C major harmonized with chords I, IV and V . Learn it and then transpose it to all the other keys.

The table below shows the primary chords in all twelve major keys.

Although most melodies can be harmonized using only chords I, IV and V, it is also common to use one or more of the remaining chords (II, III, VI and VII ) to create a different feeling. These other chords are called secondary chords. As with primary chords, the secondary chord chosen for the harmony in any given bar should contain the melody note which occurs on the first or third beat of that bar (wherever the chord changes). Here is the melody from the previous example harmonized with both primary and secondary chords. Once again, learn it and then transpose both the melody and the chords to all the other keys.

Peter Gelling

Peter Gelling

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Class Sessions

1- Suspended Chords 2- Seventh Chords 3- Minor Key Scale Tone Triads 4- Scale Tone Chords 5- Syncopation 6- Electronic Tuner 7- Learning All the Notes 8- Arpeggios 9- Minor Chords 10- Identifying Eighth Note Rhythms 11- Rests 12- Chords 13- Bar Chords 14- The Triplet 15- Sixteenth Notes 16- More About 12 Bar Blues 17- Power Chords 18- Tuning Your Guitar 19- Strumming Triplets 20- Slash Chords 21- Major Key Triad Pattern 22- The Leaden-in 23- Gaining Control of Sixteenth Notes 24- Tones and Semitones 25- Playing Two Strings With The First Finger 26- Chords I IV and Vin all Keys 27- Visualizing 28- Percussive Strumming 29- Add Nine Chords 30- Notes on The Sixth String 31- Rhythm Notation 32- Strumming 33- Rests With Chord Playing 34- Sharps 35- Swing Rhythms 36- Acoustic Guitars 37- Transposing 38- Percussive Strumming With Bar Chords 39- Riffs 40- Riffs Using Sixteenth Notes 41- Bass Runs 42- Note Values 43- Adding Scale Tones To Chords 44- Strumming Directions 45- Ties 46- Developing Rhythmic Control 47- Common 16th Note Figures 48- The Chromatic Scale 49- Root 5 Bar Chords 50- Chords in Other Minor Keys 51- The Shuffle 52- Primary Chords 53- Playing Two Strings Together 54- Major Chord Formations 55- Electric Guitars 56- Strings 57- Notes on The Fifth String 58- Moveable Power Chords 59- Pivot and Guide Fingers 60- Transposing in Minor Keys 61- Power Chord Sixteenth Note Rhythm Parts 62- Flats 63- Harmonizing Melodies 64- Common Progressions 65- Right Arm Position 66- Right Hand Damping 67- Changing Between Shapes 68- Moveable Chord Shapes 69- Harmonic Minor Scale Tone Chords 70- Learning the Guitar Fretboard 71- Rock 'n' Roll Chords 72- Chord Diagrams 73- Melodic Minor Scale Tone Chords 74- Chord Shapes 75- A Rock Chord Shapes 76- Rhythm Notation 77- D Rock Chord Shapes 78- Tablature 79- E Rock Chord Shapes 80- Music Notation 81- Twelve Bar Blues

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