B, D and F sharp.
A note is a single sound, and a chord is a set of notes played at the same time to give a harmonious sound.
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The notes for ABBA's Mamma Mia on piano begin with E D E D D D E F E D. You can get the remaining notes from the Music Notes website for a small fee.
Take a piano for example. If you hit a single key, that is a note. If you hit a combination of keys, it can usually be classified as a chord of some sort. Chords are composed of many notes stacked up. They can be very dissonant sometimes. Common chords in basic pieces include I, V, IV, V^7, I64, II65.
a chord
A♯, Cx (double sharp) and E♯ (F).
On guitar and piano, it's a combination of several notes to make one beautiful sound.
According to many people there are 12 "common" chords, however, there are many chord combinations. A chord can be any two or more notes, so a chord can have 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or more notes. With that number of combinations, chord possibilities are almost limitless.
It's extremely simple. If you're using sheet music with the chords written on already, then there is no change at all! If you're not, then what you need to do is find the bass note of the chord. So, for a chord consisting of C, E, and G, the Bass note is C and that's the chord you need to play on the guitar :)
no Actually, it depends on what you mean. A flute is a single note instrument, so a single flute cannot play a chord. However, the notes are the same, because a standard flute is a concert pitched instrument, so a C on the piano is a C on the flute, therefore, a C chord on the piano is a C chord on the flute. the difference is, it takes 3 flutes to play a tried, but a single piano can play a triad.
There are two or more notes in a chord. Guitar chords usually have three notes... look on wikipedia.com and look up guitar chords or musical chords or something Piano chords are usually 3 notes. Minor addition: "Chords" aren't usually three notes. Triads are three notes, but a chord can be any number of notes, 2 or more.
Well, considering they're both made up of many notes played at the same time, and also both possess the name "chord," I would say yes. A chord is a chord
It depends on what you mean by the question. I think that you mean the chord Bm, when you see it over lyrics or some other such thing: The "Bm" symbol indicates a chord with the notes B - D - F# in that order.
Besides adding notes on top of the chord like the 7th,9th,11th,13th. Augmented and diminished chords where you flatted and sharp different notes of a chord. You can invert the chord and put the chords `1,3,5 and even 7 in the root, the bottom note, of the chord. That should keep you busy for a while.
I believe that would be a chord, if I'm not mistaken...
An arpeggio is a 'broken chord.' So on piano, if you played C,E, & G together you would have a C chord. If you wanted to arpeggiate the chord, play each note separately. You can continue this all the way up the piano: C,E,G,C,E,G,C,E,G etc. This works for any traditional chord - just play one note at a time.