So, I got this nice little Ibanez AF-55, sort of a clone of the classic hollow-body Gibson ES-175. Whatever.
The last time I was fooling with the guitar, after I'd given up rock guitar and went into rock/jazz/classical piano, I remembered it being pretty easy to do rootless chords (up to the 13th, but at least to the 9th).
Using, really, just the top three strings. I don't remember how I figured it out, but definitely not "cowboy chords." Just the kinds of simple chords (usually omit the root and the plain fifth, on the principle that it's really the third and the seventh that define a harmony in the context of a full band) that people use to comp in, say, bebop style and after.
I don't have the energy to just blindly pluck around or transcribe random bits from Wes or Grant Green or Jim Hall.
When I Bing or Google, there's just the usual garbage from some self-promoting turds. Difficult to find just a basic syllabus of chords up to the 13th ommitting redundant notes.
Anyone know of a reliable resource for actual rootless voicings on guitar, played on the top strings?
Alternatively, this could be a good chance to actually learn to properly read music at the guitar fretboard. Yeah, yeah, I know about tablature notation, but I'm not going to read tab somebody else made, which probably is inaccurate anyway, and if I make more transcriptions, it'll be in standard notation, like an actual musician.
I can certainly make those voicings conceptually and at the keyboard, and translate it to the fretboard, but I think a little crib or syllabary would help me get some feeling back in the fingers at the fretboard (and the other hand) without it being such a chore.
Making improvised lines, that's not so much a problem for me: I can just sound it out, and that's fun for me.