Triggers - How to Remember Songs

Tips and Tricks to remembering songs an chord progressions

Triggers - How to Remember Songs (triggers.shtml) | Updated: 01-Jan-2009 - 02:46

How Triggers Work click to show or hide section

 

Triggers are a way to remember a song or chord progression, independent of a particular key. It is a pathway or road map through a song. I've always had trouble remembering songs and was amazed at how most pro musicians can remember so many songs.

The trick is to remember the very common harmonic sequences, be able to identify a chord's function within a tonalty and apply roman numerals to these chords. So when starting at A, how to get to B and pathway to get you there. Like a maze or directions when travling.

Look for cycles, modulations an repeating sections.

Here is an example using a very simple standard song Blue Bossa by Kenny Durham.

The most common key is Cm

Cm7

Cm7

Fm7

Fm7

Dm7b5

G7

Cm7

Cm7

Ebm7

Ab7

Dbmaj7

Dbmaj7

Dm7b5

G7

Cm7

Cm7

This can be summarized as:

Cm: I

I

IV

IV

II

V

I

I

Db: II

V

I

I

Cm: II

V

I

I

And further summarized keyless as:

I IV II V I ↑m3 II V I ↑m2 II V Im

The key to this notation if found on every song page.

And in english if you where explaining it to a fellow musician that has a little of the principles of how chord progressions work would be:

It is a I IV II V I on minor then up a minor third and them II V I in a major key. Up 1/2 step and II V minor to the I of the key. That is the whole harmonic structure of Blue Bossa.

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

↓ expand sections collapse sections ↓

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

showhide

↑ expand sections collapse sections ↑



Curt%20Sheller
Quantcast


Website brought to you by
Curt Sheller

Curt Sheller Publications
www.CurtSheller.com
Hosted by MacHighway

Top 50 Ukulele Sites
Valid CSS!