G major, C major, D major.
The subdominant is the 4th note in a scale, so in A major it's D.
The subdominant is the 4th scale degree. In G major, that's C.
The semitones (half steps) in a major scale are between the 3rd and 4th and the 7th and 8th notes.
the major pentatonic scale ( notes played are 1st note or "Root" note, then the 2nd, 3rd, 5th and the 6th) differs from the the minor pentatonic (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) D major pentatonic: D, E, F#, A, and B (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, and 6th notes of the D scale.) D minor pentatonic: D, F, G, A, and C (1st, 3rd flatted, 4th, 5th, and 7th flatted) (D =1st note , 3rd flatted = F (F# becomes F when flatted), G = 4th note, A = 5th note and 6th note flatted = C (C# becomes C when flatted). Hope that is helpful.. Same pattern applys to other notes for creating major and minor pentatonic scales.
It depends on which key. It's the tonic in C major/minor, the 2nd in Bb major/minor, the 3rd in Ab major and A minor, the 4th in G major/minor, the 5th in F major/minor, the 6th in Eb major and E minor, and the 7th in Db major and D natural minor.
The subdominant is the 4th scale degree. In the key of C major, the subdominant is F.
In a major key, the dominant (watch your spelling) is the 5th, and the subdominant is the 4th scale degree. So, in the key of C, F is the subdominant and G is the dominant.
If you mean the 4th diatonic chord of B Major the answer is E major, B, C#, D#, E and when the triad is built it comes out as E-G#-B
The subdominant is the 4th note in a scale, so in A major it's D.
The subdominant is the 4th scale degree. In G major, that's C.
It means "suspended". Chances are, you're either looking at a "sus2" or a "sus4". It means to play the 2nd or the 4th note instead of the 3rd. In a major chord, only 3 notes are played. The first, third, and fifth notes in that major scale. Just replace the 3rd with whatever note is being suspended...2 or 4.
The subdominant in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of B-flat major is E-flat.
The semitones (half steps) in a major scale are between the 3rd and 4th and the 7th and 8th notes.
No it is not. The symbol C7 is referring to a C Dominant 7 chord. They are closely related though. Both chords contain the C Major triad containing the notes C-E-G. The Cmaj7 chord has what is called a Major 7 added to the triad. In the case of the C Major scale the natural 7th is B. So the CMaj7 chord is spelled C-E-G-B. The difference between Maj7 chords and Dominant 7 chords is that in Dom 7 chords the 7th that is added to the major triad is one half step lower than the major 7th. This is called the minor 7th. In the case of the C7 chord the Major 7th (B) is flatted (lowered) a half step to become the minor 7th (Bb). Thus the B becomes Bb for the C7 chord. So the CMaj7 chord is spelled C-E-G-Bb.
The subdominant note in a scale is the 4th, which in the key of E major is A.
yes. 1st finger = 1st fret 3rd string, 2nd finger = 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger = 2nd fret 5th string. All other strings are played open. correction: the chord described above is an E chord An A chord is played by placing your 2nd finger on the 2nd fret 4th string, 3rd finger on the 2nd fret 3rd string, 4th finger on the 2nd fret 2nd string, 1st and 5th strings played open, 6th string not played.
1st and 2nd strings open 3rd string 1st fret 4th and 5th strings 2nd fret 6th string open