So, of course you have homework. And it's going to be a lot of fun, this homework. Well it's always fun because it's, it's mandatory that you have fun in this class. So your homework we did the 735 voicing for the major 7th chord. Remember, [SOUND] root position, C Major 7. Only in this time we're going to play the 7-3-5 voicing, [SOUND] and we still have our same c Major 7 chord. C Major. Do the same thing with F Major. Root, 7-3-5, root in the bass. And what I would like you to do for homework is just practice those two chords. [SOUND]. Maybe give each chord four beats. [MUSIC] Or you can play it in three four time. And give each chord 3 beats, 1, 2, 3. [MUSIC] [MUSIC] >> And what you can do is, you can break up the- >> [MUSIC] >> Chord a little bit and arpeggiate it. Which means not to play all the notes at the same time. >> [MUSIC] >> Or maybe do two measures of three. >> [MUSIC] >> And then two measures of three for F. [MUSIC] So you go one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two. Maybe arpeggiate a little bit. [MUSIC] Okay? 735 voicing, same thing for the dominant seventh chord, real position dominant 7, 1, 3, 5 flat 7, 735 voicing, flat 7, 3, 5 [MUSIC] with the root in the bass So we have one, two, three, four, go to f7. One, two, three, four. How about a g7? g triad. Take the seventh, which is always a half step down from the root. Remember. Seventh is always a half step down from the root and then we take it down again to a flat seven. So your G seven is G, B, D, F and if we did the 735 voicing. We have F which is our flat seven. B which is our three. D which is the five. And a G in the base. So we have our G7 chord. [MUSIC] All the white keys. [MUSIC] F7, [MUSIC] C7. [MUSIC] Giving each chord four beats One, two, three, four, [MUSIC] g7, [MUSIC] c7. [MUSIC] And I want you to practice this by playing a blues progression using the 735 voicing. So you'll go c, [MUSIC] c, [MUSIC] c, c then f, back to c, [MUSIC] then g [MUSIC] F. [MUSIC] C. [MUSIC] G, back to C. [MUSIC] C. [MUSIC] F. [MUSIC] C. [MUSIC] G. [MUSIC] F. [MUSIC] And then C. [MUSIC] That's a nice little ending there. [MUSIC] I like to call it the big ending, and it's very easy to play, it's just, [SOUND] c, down a whole step, [SOUND] down a half step, [SOUND] down a half step, [SOUND] down a half step. [SOUND] Then it's just g,a,b,c. G, A, B, C. [SOUND] G, A, B, C. C, B flat, A, A flat, G, A, B, C. In the left hand, for those of you who can put both hands together, it would be C, E, F G flat. Then g,a,b,c. Ba, ba, ba, ba, bo, badda, ba, bop. [MUSIC] C, e, f, g flat. [MUSIC] G, a,b,c. So both hands together, you have. [MUSIC] Then a c7 chord at the end. [MUSIC] So if you're playing the last four bars of the blues you have g, [MUSIC] f and big ending here ba,ba,boom, boom, ba, da, boom. [MUSIC] There you go. Now go have fun guys. 15 minutes of practice. Guys, I forgot to add one more thing to your homework. And that is, I would like for you to write your own chord chart. And I want you to do, just write a Blues, okay? Write a, create, I should say, create a chord chart That's a 12-bar Blues similar to what we did. Only I want you to do it by hand on manuscript paper, okay? Just so you get used to seeing it. You get used to writing it. And it'll be a lot of fun. How do I know it's going to be fun? Because I've already told you, it's mandatory that you have fun. Alright so you're going to create your very own chord chart C blues alright get to work.