Best "Guitar Chord Workouts" in a song

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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What in your opinion.. are some Great "Guitar Chord Workouts"
in songs?

Songs with hard Chord Changes (on guitar)


an obvious choice is Giant Steps


What are some other ones?

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I like Pat Metheny's "James" and still find "All the Things You Are" fertile ground. Also try Brubeck's "The Duke" which manages to travel through all 12 keys. There's a great version on Harvey Swartz' "Urban Earth".

Cheers,
Gordon

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All the things you are, for sure. I can't get started could be another one.
member of the guild of professional dilettantes.

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memyselfandus wrote:
an obvious choice is Giant Steps
On KVR? Really? I'd be willing to bet that the bulk of the gentry here never even heard of it. I'd think that the bulk of this thread gets Meshuggah titles. :lol:

-B
Berfab
So many plugins, so little time...

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hmmm.. not sure, but I'll offer up my favourite strunming warm up - it's from Tubular Bells, about halfway through pt1:
dots to represent semiquavers/16ths

|A...D...G..C..A.|
|A...D...G..C..A.|
|A...E...B..D..A.|
|..E...B..D..A...|
|G...DG..E.D.A...|
|G...DG.F..Bb.A...|
|G...DG..E.D.A...|
|G...DA..|

I like to play it as barred chords as starting slow then getting as fast as I can. The strange timing in the middle means you have to concentrate and not just hammer through. It's also very playable open, and presents a different and useful challenge.

For a picking warm up, I often use the opening of the same piece of music. It's mucking about with Am, but the pulloffs, hammerons and shifting time signatures present sufficient interest to make it a good exercise. Once that's done, you then use a barre and take it up the neck - which everso exciting :)

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I vote for Classical Gas...version by Tommy Emmanuel. This video has some great close-ups of the chord changes:
:hail:
"There are 10 kinds of people in the world---those who understand binary numbers and those who don't." - Unknown

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Stairway, man. :hihi:

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Beardedone wrote:I like Pat Metheny's "James" and still find "All the Things You Are" fertile ground. Also try Brubeck's "The Duke" which manages to travel through all 12 keys. There's a great version on Harvey Swartz' "Urban Earth".

Cheers,
Gordon
Metheny's "Better Days Ahead" has got some interesting changes. Seems like a key change every bar or two, and yet the melody stays pretty much diatonic -- awesome tune; tough to play over.
"Enough Spyro Gyra and you're hoping you'll be killed in a knife fight."
-- Chris in the morning

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To me, relatively fast "rhythm changes" (basically I-VI-II-V in various incarnations plus some B-part which usually is easier) are still quite tough to master as soon as things speed up. And you find them in about each and every standard, as an ending turnaround or whatever.

Other jazz standards that feature more or less logical progressions but aren't that easy to master:
- There Will Never Be Another You
- Days Of Wine And Roses
- Stella By Starlight
- Four Brothers
- Donna Lee
- Beautiful Love
and countless others...

Personally, I think "Giant Steps" is more like a "scale hero show off" and I haven't ever listened to a version I even remotely liked.
There are 3 kinds of people:
Those who can do maths and those who can't.

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Anything by Allan Holdsworth

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Sascha Franck wrote:Personally, I think "Giant Steps" is more like a "scale hero show off" and I haven't ever listened to a version I even remotely liked.
To each their own, obviously, but I find the original version exhilarating.
"Enough Spyro Gyra and you're hoping you'll be killed in a knife fight."
-- Chris in the morning

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The Black Page

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tboulette wrote:
Sascha Franck wrote:Personally, I think "Giant Steps" is more like a "scale hero show off" and I haven't ever listened to a version I even remotely liked.
To each their own, obviously, but I find the original version exhilarating.
yes, i'm with you there (actually, the full album is masterful and a great insight into a turnaround and turbulent period for the great man), but i think we can both understand what Sascha is aiming at. It's a difficult tune to reinterpret and make it your own, IMVVVHO it even led Coltrane to a no-turning point... from that moment on, only rebirth or silence.

even more Off Topic:
Sascha Franck wrote:Donna Lee
really like that one, as "Back home in indiana". It's always a lesson for me to ear the music change from Lester Young's 30's records into the first Parker and then into a memorable (but obscure, i'm afraid) concert at the Pershing, where he absolutely tears the tune into pieces :shock: :hail:

whait a minute, this is KVR? how did we ended talkin'this stuff here? :hihi:


cheers!
member of the guild of professional dilettantes.

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The Clap by Steve Howe can be challenging.


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memyselfandus wrote:What in your opinion.. are some Great "Guitar Chord Workouts"
in songs?

Songs with hard Chord Changes (on guitar)


an obvious choice is Giant Steps


What are some other ones?
youve probably seen this but its kinda cool


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