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There are usually three notes.
When you invert a chord, all that you are doing is taking the third or fifth of that chord (so if it was a C chord, an E or a G), and you make that note the bass note. It gives the chord a bit of instability. Having the fifth especially does so.
Depends on the chord.
no
three-note chord (apex)
The III note is A. However, the 3rd note in the chord is the V note. That is C. The F major chord is F, A, C.
At a x1 multiplier: * 50 points for a single note. * 100 points for a 2 note chord. * 150 points for a 3 note chord.
Supertonic - tonic cadence = Chord 2 followed by chord 1. You should only have two notes in the treble of chord 1. Make sure that the bass part and leading note go to the tonic and add the 3rd note of the chord somewhere in the treble.
A minor chord is major third on top of a minor third. to make a minor chord take a major chord and move the middle note down a half step
That is called the "base" of the chord. Try not to get this word confused with "root," which is the lowest note of the chord if it is in root position. Root position is when the chord is built up in thirds. Ex: C, E and G make up the C chord and the root of the chord "C" is also the base note. If this same C chord is mixed around so that G is the lowest note then higher in order is C and then E, then G would be the base note of the chord.
Means it's a chord were C is the fundamental note. The fundamental note, is the note from were the chord is constructed. So if it's a C major chord, it could be C E G or C E G B
One needs to combine at least three notes simultaneously for their note to be defined as a chord. Combining three notes to make a chord is considered a triad. More notes can be added to produce more complex chords.
A suspended chord is a normal chord, but from there you move the middle finger up half a note. This often sounds slightly off. But many songs have a few.