We NEED to talk about triads!

Yes you have it and use caged to quickly find your way around. If you know the notes on the neck and the spellings of the chord you want, you have it anyway.
People have been asking me to teach them how to shred for 40 years, and I’ve always told them to memorize the natural notes on their instrument and burn in their triads. Not that I’ve ever been a shredder, but guitar players aren’t the sharpest pencils in the jar so….
 
For myself, when it comes to anything chord related, triads have got to be *the* most important things I ever tried to explore. In this thread, I'll be trying to share some of the "whys" and "hows".

Way cool subject and a timely post for me. Coincidentally Just a few days ago I put playing triads diatonically up and down the scale into my daily practice routine again. I had learned them before but haven't played them that way in awhile, so I'm a little rusty. Hoping to get proficient at triads again.

I have a couple questions. Forgive me if you already covered them in your previous posts.

1. Which stringsets are triads most useful on? I been doing major and minor scales diatonically on the 1st stringet (strings 1, 2 and 3), 2nd stringset (strings 2, 3, and 4) and 3rd stringset (strings 3, 4 and 5). I'm starting to think the 3rd stringset is overkill because it's in a lower register).

2. Should I throw augmented triads into the mix? With the minor scale I been playing triads with the ii chord diminished, the III chord major and the vii chord diminished. However I'm thinking about playing the III chord as augmented when in minor. It might be a cool sound for some variety.
When this thread came out in early Febuary it piqued my interest. I had already learned the 3 inversions of major and minor triads on the two highest stringsets quite awhile back. I decided to learn the two lower stringsets in major and minor also, as well as the diminished and augmented triads on all 4 stringsets.

The way I burned them into my memory and fingers is to practice the 3 inversions of the 4 qualities of triads in one key a day on each of the 4 stringsets. That is for example on a Monday all 3 inversions of F major triads, 3 inversions of F minor triads, 3 inversions of F diminished and the 3 inversions (1 shape per stringset) of augmented triads on all 4 stringsets.

This is a little less daunting than it sounds at 1st blush due to the augmented triads are 1 shape per stringset. And for the 2 lower stringsets the shapes are the same. On Tuesday I'll do them all in Bb, Wednesday in Eb etc. through the circle of 5ths. After about a month of this I should have my triads under my fingers and in my brain pretty well.

Oh and almost forgot, I play triads up and down the scale diatonically in major, minor, harmonic minor and melodic minor in the key of the day.
 
On Tuesday I'll do them all in Bb, Wednesday in Eb etc. through the circle of 5ths. After about a month of this I should have my triads under my fingers and in my brain pretty well.

I actually don't do it this way. I just play. I do however try to cover as many keys as possible. And I do especially try to cover less guitar friendly keys - because even if transposing is easy and sometimes things are just a centimeter away, there's still a noticeable difference between, say, C and Db, even if you leave the open strings out.
 
I tried, but it put me to sleep. Which is why I asked the question….

Well, I'm afraid I can't help you then. Because I explained anything there is to explain (at least so far) already.
If you know all your triads already, if you can play and modify them fluently all over the neck already, this thread isn't for you. And that's not even remotely meant snarky or whatever. Be happy about it. Seriously.
 
Playing closed-voiced triads is relatively easy once you memorize all the intervals between adjacent tones. For example: in ascending order, a major triad, root position has a major third, then a minor third. In first inversion, the same triad has a minor third, then a perfect fourth. In second inversion, there's a perfect fourth, then a major third.

Open voicings are a only bit more challenging but potentially very rewarding. Using the same example as above, an open-voiced major triad in root position has a perfect fifth, then a major sixth. In first inversion, there is a minor sixth, then a perfect fifth. In second inversion, there's a major sixth, then a minor sixth. Because some voices are not on adjacent strings, playing open voiced triads requires selective string muting for chords and string skipping for arpeggios, so it will take a little more effort to learn.

While the above is not terribly specific to guitar, it's not especially difficult to translate general musical information about intervals to fretboard fingerings/shapes. Knowing the intervals in triads, combined with knowledge of the intervals between string pairs, enables the player to learn and execute triads with minimal effort, both as chords and as arpeggios. IMO it's better to learn the shapes/fingerings on your own directly from knowledge of the various intervals than to rely on fretboard diagrams created by someone else.
 
IMO it's better to learn the shapes/fingerings on your own directly from knowledge of the various intervals than to rely on fretboard diagrams created by someone else.

I absolutely agree. And this is why I only did show diagrams all over the fretboard for the first round covering major triads.
 
I actually don't do it this way. I just play. I do however try to cover as many keys as possible. And I do especially try to cover less guitar friendly keys - because even if transposing is easy and sometimes things are just a centimeter away, there's still a noticeable difference between, say, C and Db, even if you leave the open strings out.
Yeah my old teacher Don Mock used to say the guitar is a slide ruler.
Sadly what that doesn't take into account is us being used to fretmarkers that make that Db a pain
 
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