

🎶 Spin your way to songwriting stardom with The Chord Wheel!
The Chord Wheel Music Theory Guide is a compact, visual tool designed for guitarists, pianists, and all instrumentalists to master chord theory, key changes, and harmony without needing to read music. It enables instant transposition of chord progressions across any key, making it an essential resource for musicians, songwriters, and educators aiming to accelerate their creative process and deepen their understanding of music theory.





| Best Sellers Rank | #16,468 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #4 in Music Reference (Books) #20 in Music Theory (Books) #110 in Music Instruction & Study (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 4,512 Reviews |
L**N
A great reference to start with and to get you writing those Grammy hits sooner
This is the book that have if you want to solve the puzzle of music I would also suggest that you get a college Edition text on first-year music theory and that will make this book more relevant and using the lessons caught and this text should help you it's definitely a place to understand the important rules of music and apply them while practicing just play around with them put the rule in use when you're playing the piano or the guitar or whatever your instrument is and like a video game or any skill that you undertake the more that you do that the greater your understanding will become and the more skilled you'll become but it will take effort but this text of the Circle of will help you leap I had and writing the songs that you've been wanting to write Another idea that you might want to pursue which was beneficial to me was to actually take a class at the local University 38th and music theory the way that that can be helpful is I learn more by sight then I Do by reading text it's what it's called kinesthetic learning and just the discussions the testing the going over the rules drawing things examples on the Whiteboard that your professor will do when he or she are discussing the rules of music was very helpful to me it is a hard class I'm not talkin about Elementary music theory classes I'm talking about the first class that a music Major would take in college in the study of Music Theory and you will work for you grade but you could also take it and request it be not for a grade but you're doing it simply to learn music theory and the participation with the other students and with the professor and going through the readings and the test 4 a quarter or semester whichever the school decides is the best way a grading. Should take place I found very very helpful and it's something that will stick with you and if you don't use it a little bit of refresher in from the book which I would suggest you keep and not sell back to the bookstore and this book will get you right back in the saddle again should you have to detour away from music for a little while but this particular text is a pretty good place to start if you want to hit the beach running in music I apologize for this being a long evaluation of this book but I thought it was also a good opportunity to give a few ideas about how to become solid in understanding the Mysteries that are the rules of music and with that in mind the Beatles did not know how to read music studied very little music theory and became the most prolific and greatest band in history but I threw the ideas out there so that you can decide which is best for you you might think and if you want to pursue things like the Beatles this book will give you a little bit more than they had and help you write those number one hits and break into stardom a little bit quicker :-)
M**S
Great tool for the money
The Chord Wheel touches the most basic foundation in chord theory and chord progressions. The wheel itself and the way it is designed, is a great visual aid. The wheel, on the front of the book, (basically the circle of fifths) will be the most useful part for the majority of users. Within the rest of the 12 page book, it expands more in detail about chord theory. This book is most useful, in it's applications, for keyboard or guitar chord progression. I have played bass guitar, electric and acoustical guitar and keyboard (somewhat) for years and have recently picked up playing a ukulele, which only has 4 strings and is tuned entirely different than guitar. The Chord Wheel enables me, instantly, to be able to transpose songs that I know in one key on my guitar to any other key that is a better fit on my ukulele. You still need to have the knowledge of your instrument and how to play basic chords on them but this is the practical tool to have to transpose into other keys. This is a great transposing aid for other stringed instruments, as well, like banjo, mandolin, etc. Also, for the writer/composer, the visual aid enhances of all the family of chords available, in relation with the key he is composing in. This is also beneficial for the singer/player that needs to transpose his song into a different key for a better voice fit. Music has been around me for many years and the Chord Wheel is a very convenient cheat sheet in transposing and in the understanding of basic theory on the chord progressions in any given key. I am definitely happy to have this in my tool kit.
A**M
Just plain awesome!!!
An excellent tool for learnig muscic theory! I found this to be the most useful and versatile tool for gaining comprehension and insight of chord and scale structure. It has also increased my understanding of how it all fits together and expanded my view of theory. You can use this tool at any stage of musicianship you are presently in and it will help you get centered as well as to progress your understanding the circle of 5ths, 4ths, chord progression, song writing, and a good basic understanding of theory. The 'Chord Wheel' is a great aid with other musical literature that you may use or will use as you advance further musically. In fact I use this as my main guide which helps me with anything that I am trying to learn, play, or create. In am thankful for finding this tool, I only wish I had discovered this years sooner! If you are just begining, this is well worth it! It all comes down to the time and effort you are willing to put into learning - it all takes time and practice; this is a good place to start. If you're a seasoned musician, well then, this is a good resource while writing those songs and finding those missing chords or notes for those awesome leads or chord changes; creating and sculpting that riff. For me, I know I can't remember all the theory and what fits where when I need it to. So this is a great reference guide that I keep returning to over and over again to keep me in the groove...
M**L
Oh now I get it!
Great reference tool to take the self taught guitarist to another level of understanding of music theory. I am an experienced guitarist who has played for well over 40 years. I had lessons as a child and can read music on a basic level, I have an innate sense of keys and harmonic relationships and can move easily between keys by ear however being able to plan different keys and see the harmonic relationships in a more academic sense hasn't been something I could easily do. Jim Fleser's chord wheel has made it easy. It doesn't make me an expert on music theory but provides good insight and serves as an easy to use reference tool.
H**S
Finally demystified everything about music theory for me
I can't say enough positive things about this brief little book! I read through the reviews here before buying figuring that I could use the Chord Wheel but the rest of the book would be unhelpful. So many people said the same thing. I absolutely disagree! The 12 pages in this brief book cover more material, more simply and clearly, than anything else I have ever come across. Most books I have seen start with basics, and build on with excercises that I get lost in for lack of ability to see the big picture. What am I supposed to be learning? How does it all fit together? Why isn't this fun? I would have to practically earn a PhD in music before I would ever figure out how to be creative and actually enjoy playing music with most music instruction books. THIS book, on the other hand, is invaluable. The Chord Wheel itself, as everyone seems to agree, is really cool. Pick a key, play the chords within that chord family (found online or by looking them up in a separate chord reference guide) in any order or combination that appeals to you, and you sound good playing your instrument. The 12 pages of text are OUTSTANDING. The first time I read through it, I couldn't understand it at all. The second time, it took some concentration but I managed to comprehend everything. The third time, I understood it with less effort and it made just a little more sense. After the third time through I started asking questions - what about minor keys? There are minor keys, right? I read more closely and it all started clicking. I may not be able to teach it to someone else just yet, but every time I read it, it makes more and more sense. The thing is, it's only twelve pages, so you can read it in a short time. You don't have to master every concept to at least understand how it all fits together - and once you understand that, everything else is easier to learn. Chord progressions and analysis, circle of fifths, scales, modes - learn what that means here, and you'll have a strong conceptual foundation to get the most out of other music books - the ones I couldn't get through! I may revisit them, but there is enough here for me to work on (actually playing music, not reading and working through exercises), that I don't feel any urgency just now. Just give the book a chance. Read through it more than once. If you don't get it, you will if you keep at it. It actually isn't all that hard, really, it is just that people like me with a minimal to zero musical background are naturally going to have a hard time building a conceptual framework for undestanding the language of music. If you are looking for something to get you up and running, this is it! Combine it with chord reference charts or you won't be able to use it (if you can't play the chords!) but you can find that stuff online or at the library.
B**L
The Gold Standard of Chord Wheels
First off I would like to say that I looked at many different chord wheels and this one makes the most sense. The layout is logical and easy to comprehend. I bought two several years ago, one for me and one for a band member and it has been by far one of the most helpful teaching tools for music I've found. Another friend of mine has been asked by her church music team to teach theory to the band members and my recommendation is that The Chord Wheel is the first place to start. Thank you Mr. Fleser for absolutely the best chord wheel money can buy and at a very reasonable price. And as a side note, the theory lessons within this little booklet are worth their weight in gold!
A**R
If you're not a music expert like me, read how this can help
Just to give you an idea of what kind of a user I am of this Chord Wheel, I'm just a hobbyist musician. I can play by ear a little, then it takes me a hundred times to play what I heard before I get it perfect; in other words, while I have the talent to play by ear, I'm slow. I also like to compose, and chord progressions are a major source of inspiration. Even with my simpleton music-making, I cannot escape Transposition (i.e., changing of keys). I love this chord wheel because it makes changing key a snap! Let me give a simple example. If my song has this chord sequence: C, F, then G. If you look at the wheel, F is one counter-clockwise step of C, and G is one clockwise step of C. Now let's say I want to change to the key of F#. All I have to do is look at F# in the wheel, and I'd see one counter-clockwise of F# is B, and one clockwise of F# is C#. So, C-F-G in the key of C is equivalent to F#-B-C# in the key of F#. Voila! Now of course I could've counted the notes, i.e., F is the third note after C, and G is the fourth note after C. Likewise, I could say B is the third note after F#, and C# is the fourth note after F#. But that would've taken more time. For musicians who are familiar with the Roman Numeral notation, you'd know that C-F-G is I-IV-V. So to transpose this to the key of F#, simply turn the wheel to point to F#, and you will see roman numerals I-IV-V under F#-B-C#, respectively. As I said, since I'm just a simpleton hobbyist musician, I use this for the most elementary of ways, but it's will save me cumulative time the many future transpositions I find myself making time and time again. Good tool, will never make music without it again. :)
R**L
Helps on guitar knowledge
Nice!helps on my guitar playing knowledge!
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