Sorry all,
Here is where I found it when I was searching for chords:
Mandolin Cafe Forum > Music by Genre > Celtic, U.K., Nordic, Quebecois, European Folk > Chords
or
https://www.mandolincafe.com/forum/a...p/t-26278.html
So I'll also be happy to get advice on the # because I became fixated on the four digit codes
Here is the relevant extract from a 2006 post by Ed Sherry:
"
At sessions, I generally play the melody, not chords, if I know the tune. #But if I don't know the tune, I'll often chord along. #(I can pick up chord changes to new tunes quicker than I can pick up melodies "on the fly.") #
I'd recommend learning some basic 1-4-5 chords for such situations.
In the key of D: #D (2002), G (0023), and A (6200 or 2200).
In the key of G: #G (0023), C (0230) and D (2002).
In the key of A: #A (2200 or 6200), D (2002) and E (1220 or 1020).
In the key of Em: #Em (0220), Am (2230 or 2235) and B7 (4022).
In the key of Am: #Am (2230), Dm (2001) and E7 (1020).
In E dorian: #Em (0220) and D (2002).
In A dorian: #Am (2200 or 2230) and G (0023).
In B dorian: #Bm (4022) and A (2200 or 6200).
That covers about 90-95% of the tunes I run across in sessions. There are obviously lots of other chords available.
"
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