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Chord progression solfa of “Intentional” by Travis Greene

Intentional

Someone requested that I should post the chord progression of this beautiful song by Travis Green, the name of the song is Intentional.

instrumentalist playing intentional by travis greene

 

              Lah(A)
Oh Oh Oh
                         Doh(C)
Oh Oh Oh Oh Oh
       Reh(D)
Oh Oh
  mi-fah(F)
Oh Oh
Lah(A)                                      Doh(C)
All things are working for my Good
          Reh(D)                        mi-fah(F)
It’s Intentional
Never failing
Lah(A)                                      Doh(C)
All things are working for my Good
Reh(D)                                  mi –fah(F)
All things are working for my Good
(It goes on and on like that with the same (L D R m-fah)
Lah                                                                         doh
I don’t have to worry cos it’s working for me
                                                                                Reh
                                                  It’s working for me
                                                                       Mi – Fah
                                                  It’s working for me

Chord Inversion – Lesson 13

It’s the art of re-arranging the notes of a chord in different ways.
For example:
In the key of C, the 1 chord which is C E G is in the root position, it can be inverted in two major ways:
chord inversions fingering
E G C
G C E
To get the first inversion, take the first note and put it behind the last note
C E G becomes E G C – that is how the first inversion is gotten
From E G C, take the first note again and put it behind the last one; then it becomes G C E – that’s the second inversion.

So use this principle to invert every other chords that you know.

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Fingering for playing chords(triads) – Lesson 12

To play triads, you would need only your 1, 3 and 5 fingers. Forget about the 2 and 4 fingers for now:

fingering for playing chords triads
On the left hand:
5              3              1
C             E              G
D             M            S
On the right hand
1              3              5
C             E              G
D             M            S

Keep at it, and get used to it because this is the standard for playing triads.

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Introduction to chords – Lesson 11

There are three main types of chords:

 

intorduction to playing chords lesson eleven by nigerian man
Major chords (1 4 5)
Minor chords (2 3 6)
Diminished chords (7)
Major chords:
They are gotten from the 1, 4 and 5 degrees. They have three notes they are also called primary chords. This is the formula we use to derive our major chord
Root + major third + perfect fifth
Using the popular types of intervals we learnt ealier, we can break down this formula
(if you have forgotten about intervals and their interpretation using tones and semtones, click here to refresh your memory, because you would be needing it in interpreting the formulas that i would show you)
1 chord which is C            will give us C E G
4 chord which is F             will give us F A C
5 chord which is G            will give us G B D
Those are the three major chords that we have.
Minor Chords: The members of this chords are the 2, 3 and 6 chord.
The formula for deriving the minor chords is
Root + minor third + perfect fifth
Using this formula
We have:
2 chord which is D            will give us D F A
3 chord which is E             will give us E G B
6 chord which is A            will give us A C E
Diminished Chords:
We have only one chord in this group, and that is the 7 chord.
The formula is
Root + minor third + diminished 5th
7 chord which is B            will give us B D F
Work to do:
 
Play all the 12 major chords chromatically
Play all the 12 minor chords chromatically
Play all the 12 diminished chords chromatically
Tips to easily remember How to play all these chords
 
To get a minor chord, reduce the middle note of a major by a semitone

To get a diminished reduce the perfect fifth of a minor by a semitone

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Fingering for the chromatic scale – Lesson 10

This is the correct fingering for the chromatic scale, as it will be easy for your fingers to locomote across the keys of the piano.

chromatic scale fingering
C  Db  D  Eb  E  F  Gb  G  Ab  A  Bb  B  C
2    3    1   3    1   2   3    1   3    1   3     1  2
Note that:     The black keys are played with the number 3 finger
                     Two consecutive white keys are played with fingers 1 and 2

                     A white key is played with the finger 1

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Proper fingering for the 12 major scales – Lesson 9

The way you strike the keys of your piano is very important. To enable easy and uniform movement on the piano, you have to use the correct fingering. Especially when you want to solo over a song or even play chords.

fingering for the major scale
We would take the key of C for an example:
C             D             E              F              G             A             B             C
d             r               m             f                s              l               t              d
The fingering for the left hand is
5              4              3              5              4              3              2              1
d              r              m             f                s              l               t              d
The fingering for the right hand is
1              2              3              1              2              3              4              5

d              r              m             f               s              l                t              d

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Key Signature – Lesson 8

Key signature is the number of sharps and flats a key has for us to easily identify it. When you look at a musical piece, you would find out that at the very beginning of the piece you would see series or a single sharp(s) or flat(s). They are there for you to determine the key the piece is written on. Look at an example in the picture above.

key signature
Those two sharps there tells whoever wants to interprete the piece the key of the song, so how does the circle of fifths and fourths help us to do this:
How do you determine the key signature of a song using thecircle of 4ths  and 5ths
 
circle of 4th and fifth
 
The left hand side of the clock are the flats, while the right hand side are the sharps:
Therefore according to the diagram
G = #
D = ##
A = ###
E = ####
B = ##### or bbbbbbb
F# = ###### or bbbbbb
Db = ####### or bbbbb
Ab = bbbb
Eb = bbb
Bb = bb
F = b

Circle of fourths and fifths – Lesson 7

Forget the fancy stars in the image oo.
The image above is called “Circle of 5ths” when moving in clockwise direction and “Circle of 4ths” when moving anti-clockwisely.

 

circle of 4th and fifth
It would help you to remember many key things in music but here I will only tell you how it helps you build your interval knowledge of perfect 5ths and 4ths.
From C to G is a fifth while going backward from G to C on this circle is a fourth interval.
Another instance,from F# to Db is a fifth while backward from Db to F# is a fourth.

It’s the same thing counting two and half tones for 4th interval while counting three and half tones for 5th interval but this clock or circle will help you to remember easily without counting anything.

Just look at it like a multiplication table that you use when you want to solve simple mathematics.

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

 

The Chromatic scale – Lesson 6

First of all a scale is a sequence of notes played one after the other
So a chromatic scale

child playing the chromatic scale on the piano

is the playing of notes one after the other in the semitone movement.

C   C#   D   D#   E   F   F#   G   G#   A   A#   B   C

d     de   r    re    m   fa   fe     s   ze     l    le     ti   d      —–      solfa notes of a chromatic scale

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions

Intervals – Lesson 5

Interval is the distance between two notes, they can be defined by tones and semitones
 
Common intervals you should know:

 

intervals in music
Minor 3rd (m3) = 3 semitones from the root note
Major 3rd(M3) = 4 semitones from the root note
Perfect 4th (P4) = 5 semitones from the root note
Perfect 5th (P5) = 7 semitones from the root note
Diminished 5th (flat 5) = 6 semitones from the root note
Augmented 5th (sharp 5) = 8 semitones from the root note
Octave (P8 or perfect 8th) = 12 semitones from the root note

Keep these terms, they would be used to interpret a lot of formulas that I would be showing you(Lesson 11: Introduction to Chords) in the future, so its better you write them down in your note.

Lesson 5: Intervals
Lesson 6: Chromatic Scale
Lesson 8: Key Signature
Lesson 13: Chord inversions