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$235

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Chord Wheel Free

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The Chord Changer Wheel is a FREE Download! ...download it, print on paper or cardstock, cut out two pieces, put together.

People are loving this! For the Free Download, click "Add To Cart" and proceed to checkout.
At end of checkout you will see the download link and an email will also be sent to you with the download link.

Download is two pages, and you will need 1 Roundhead Fastener (pictured above) to assemble.

How to Use Chord Wheel Instructions here

Find A Million Songs on the internet.

Do a Google search for “Song Title chords” (using title of your favorite song) and you’ll find a dozen versions. Enter “Song Title easy chords” and you’ll find a half dozen more. BUT they will be Guitar or Ukulele chords, not Strumstick chords.

The new Strumstick Chord Changer Wheel comes to the rescue!
This simple device shifts the chords from whatever Guitar key they are in to good old Key of D, the main Strumstick key.
It can also shift chords from D to G, for G Strumstick players. See what "Key" means below, if that word is unfamiliar.

The Chord Changer Wheel is FREE (download it, print on paper, cut out two pieces, put together.) or $17 assembled, postage included.

Basically, you find chords to a song. It’s in some funky key (it’s not in key of D) boo-hoo. You jot down the several chords in the song, rotate the wheel until you see those chords, and right opposite them are the Key of D Strumstick chord names. Pencil the Strumstick chords in, substituting for the original chords, and strum away, happy, happy!

 

Detail how it works:
• You find chords to a song you like, searching on the internet. Probably It’s in some unfamiliar key with strange guitar chords. It’s not made for your D Strumstick (or G Strumstick) boo-hoo hoo!. 
• You jot down the several chords in the song, on paper.
• You rotate the rear wheel until you see those chords you just wrote down in the blue window.
• Right opposite the blue chords are the Red chords you can use on your D Strumstick. Yay!  Pencil the Strumstick chords in, substituting for the original chords, and strum away, happy, happy!
 
For example, using the picture above:
Suppose the Song Chords are Ab major, C# major, Eb major and F minor  (Fm), as shown in the blue window.
The Strumstick Chords are:
Ab becomes D 
C# becomes G
Eb becomes A
Fm becomes Bm
Everywhere in the song it originally called for an Ab chord, you write in a D chord. Everywhere you see Fm, write in Bm, ETC. Find the fingerings for D, G, A and Bm at the Strumstick Chord Diagrams page.

 

For the Curious and Unafraid: What does Key mean?
Key
means Team.
A bunch of baseball players make up a team.
Different teams have different names (Yankees, Red Sox...) but they have the same positions on the team (pitcher, catcher, etc.).
If you think “Team” when you read the word “Key”, that’s about it.
A team of notes (in certain positions called scales) makes a Key, and the Key gets its name from the first note of the team.
The notes in a Key (team) occupy different positions called scales.
The starting note of the scale gives its name to the scale (or team, or Key). There will also be certain chords most often used in each key. That's why we say "the chords for Key of E", or "the chords for Key of D" 

 

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