Relative Major & Minor

Leave a Reply 8 comments

Melvin Schofield - July 12, 2024 Reply

I got really nervous before doing this quiz!

    Jonathan Boettcher - July 12, 2024 Reply

    So how do you feel about the relative major/minor topic now? Any outstanding questions or areas of confusion?

Thomas DeBacker - August 16, 2024 Reply

glitch in response to 2nd question. I answered correctly, but it showed me giving different answer. this happened in another quiz.

    Jonathan Boettcher - August 16, 2024 Reply

    So it is changing your answers on you? That’s very odd. Are you by any chance using the back button, or anything else, or just going right through? I wonder if it could be a caching issue somehow?

Ron Fluet - September 30, 2024 Reply

Some quiz feedback. I misinterpreted the inversion question and got mixed up by the word “lower”. I was thinking lower on the guitar strings (being higher pitch in my mind) and you were asking a question about lower pitch and nothing to do with the guitar neck/ strings position. You may want to say “lower pitch” in the question just for clarity. Mostly it was me going down the wrong thought process.

    Jonathan Boettcher - October 1, 2024 Reply

    Thanks for the feedback, that’s helpful. In general, whenever we say “lower” or “higher” related to the guitar it’s going to be related to pitch more so than physical location.

Ron Fluet - October 1, 2024 Reply

Quiz question about finding relative minor on fretboard… I believe there are two correct answers offered for this question. Down three frets and up one string and up two frets. Am I wrong?

    Jonathan Boettcher - October 1, 2024 Reply

    Hey Ron, I see what you’re saying… if you go up, as in from the 5th string to the 6th string, and then up two frets then yes you’re right. When I wrote the question I was thinking “up” as going from 6th string to 5th string… which would actually put you at the 5th!

    I see where the confusion is and I’ll re-word that answer. Thanks for pointing that out!

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