B flat, D, F, A flat
The key notes in an E flat chord are E flat, G, and B flat.
The first, third, fifth, and seventh note derived from the C major scale, so: C-E-G-B for a major seventh chord (Cmaj7) and the seventh note flattened to Bb or B flat in the C7 chord commonly used in pop/blues as a final chord but in most classical music to be resolved in F.
G, b, d, f
The first, third, fifth, and seventh note derived from the C major scale, so: C-E-G-B for a major seventh chord (Cmaj7) and the seventh note flattened to Bb or B flat in the C7 chord commonly used in pop/blues as a final chord but in most Classical Music to be resolved in F.
The IV chord in the key of B flat would be E flat so the triad notes would be e flat, g, and b flat (on keyboard) for guitar it would be e flat, b flat, e flat, g, b flat, and e flat. Played at the 11th fret as a bar chord in standard tuning.
A C half diminished chord consists of the notes C, E flat, G flat, and B flat. The structure of this chord is a root note (C), a minor third (E flat), a diminished fifth (G flat), and a minor seventh (B flat). In music theory, this chord is often used to create tension and a sense of dissonance before resolving to a more stable chord.
I'm not entirely sure what your asking, but a B dominant chord consists of the notes B, D#, F#, and A.
An Em7 is based on the notes: E (root) G (minor third) B (the fifth) D (the seventh)
None--a C7 chord consists of the notes C, E, G, and B-flat.
It's a flat b chord and c flat
All positions would have the same "relative" number of notes. All notes depend on the player, not the instrument, but one should be able to play 20 or more per position.
Yes. For example, a fully diminished C7 chord contains the notes C, E-flat, G-flat, and B-double-flat.