Basically every chord have several positions and it depends on the specific song which you are playing.
You can overview the basic chords positions in a very cool and animated way
If you have a capo you can put it on the first fret and play a G chord, or you can play a bar chord on the 4th fret (4-6-6-5-4-4)
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.
just like a keyboard or piano, but you're using chord buttons instead of actually forming chords on the keys. Play the chord buttons with your left hand and melody with your right hand.
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.
The notes in a B5 chord would eliminate the the D sharp note and just play the B and the F sharp
c chord, d chord and the g chord
Play these keys: C, E flat, G to get a C minor chord.
I believe that would be a chord, if I'm not mistaken...
All of the instruments can play a broken chord but the easiest to play with is the piano then guitar.. etc..
an F9 chord on the piano is where you have the f major chord (F A C) and just add the 9th to it (which in this case is a G)
No, Andy Six does not know how to play the piano.
play a major chord (which im sure you know how to do) and then flatten the mediant