First finger: 2nd fret(1st string counting down)
Second finger: 3rd fret (4th string)
Third finger: 3rd fret (3rd string)
Fourth finger: 3rd fret (2nd string)
That depends wholly on the instrument with which you play the B chord.
By playing an A# and B
There is no B minor 7 scale. B minor 7 is only a chord. If you still want to know what play over a Bm7 chord then i suggest you play one of the following scales: B minor, B minor pentatonic, B Dorian
B chord guitar charts from the following websites: Guitar About, Ultimate Guitar, Jam Play, Just In Guitar, Guitar Lessons World, Guitar Chord, Chord Book, Guitar Noise, Jazz Guitar Lessons, Chord Find, to name a few.
That would be a Barred A on the second fret, or move the A chord up two frets and play only the fingered strings.
The notes in a B5 chord would eliminate the the D sharp note and just play the B and the F sharp
chord B TABS: 3,2,4,5,2,1,21,2,43,54,3,2,3,4, :-)
Firstly, there is no B minor chord in the key of F sharp minor. Rather, it is A sharp minor chord. And you can use any chord at the end of a chord progression. Why not!
Play the G chord on the guitar.
A broken chord is when you play a chord in one hand and play the same in the other just in a pattern eg: Adele - Someone like you/ A chord is separated.
it's not a chord it means to strike the strings muted/or don't play those notes.
You can't It depends on what you mean. The B-flat trumpet plays one full tone below concert pitch, so to make the tone match, you must play one step higher. In other words, a C on the piano is a D on the trumpet. Chords work the same way. A C chord on the piano is a D chord on the trumpet. However, the trumpet can play only one note at a time, so a single trumpet cannot play a chord, but can play single notes of the chord.