Chords don't have "tonic notes". Scales do.
The tonic note of the G major scale is G (in fact, the tonic note of the X major/minor scale will always be X).
Chords do have roots, but that's equally boring: the root of the G major chord is G.
The notes in a B major triad are B, D# and F#. The notes in a Bb major triad are Bb, D and F.
it is a 3 noted note witch is uselly your 1st 2nd and 3rd finger
The tonic for G major is G.
B
d#
f#
F, a, c
A tonic is the root note of a musical piece. This note is what names the key that the song is in. So, if a minuet is written in the key of G, it's tonic note is G and its tonic chord is G major.
When working with a scale and chord progressions, each chord used in the scale has a name. The chord built on the first note is the tonic and the chord built on the fifth note is the dominant. It provides a resolution when the music moves from the firth to the first chord. In the key of C, the chord built on the first note, C-E-G, is the tonic chord, and the fifth is based on G-B-D. The dominant is the second most important step in the scale after the tonic.
It is a major chord. Actually, tonic is simply defined as the first note in the scale or key. All chords have tonic note. The tonic of a C chord is the C. The tonic of a C minor chord is a C. The tonic of a C minor major 7 is a C.
The most important note of a chord is the tonic, followed by the third and the seventh, as they are what determines the quality of the chord (i.e. Major, minor, diminished etc.) Actually, the 7th only comes into play if it's a chord that includes the 7th. A major chord is the tonic, third, and fifth. A minor chord is the tonic, flat third, and fifth. A diminished chord is the tonic, flat third, and flat fifth. None of those chords (also several others) include the 7th.
Generally, it means a chord that is missing a note. For instance, an open fifth chord is a chord with the tonic and the fifth, but no third.
A tonic is the root note of a musical piece. This note is what names the key that the song is in. So, if a minuet is written in the key of G, it's tonic note is G and its tonic chord is G major.
When working with a scale and chord progressions, each chord used in the scale has a name. The chord built on the first note is the tonic and the chord built on the fifth note is the dominant. It provides a resolution when the music moves from the firth to the first chord. In the key of C, the chord built on the first note, C-E-G, is the tonic chord, and the fifth is based on G-B-D. The dominant is the second most important step in the scale after the tonic.
It is a major chord. Actually, tonic is simply defined as the first note in the scale or key. All chords have tonic note. The tonic of a C chord is the C. The tonic of a C minor chord is a C. The tonic of a C minor major 7 is a C.
The most important note of a chord is the tonic, followed by the third and the seventh, as they are what determines the quality of the chord (i.e. Major, minor, diminished etc.) Actually, the 7th only comes into play if it's a chord that includes the 7th. A major chord is the tonic, third, and fifth. A minor chord is the tonic, flat third, and fifth. A diminished chord is the tonic, flat third, and flat fifth. None of those chords (also several others) include the 7th.
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.
The tonic is the 1st note in the scale. For example, in the G major scale, G is the tonic.
The tonic is the first note of the scale. Therefore, the tonic is G.
Generally, it means a chord that is missing a note. For instance, an open fifth chord is a chord with the tonic and the fifth, but no third.
A major chord consists of the root (tonic) note, the third scale degree (mediant) and the fifth note (dominant). In the key of C major - without sharps and flats - the C major chord consists of the notes C, E and G.
A song usually begins and starts in the same key, but it doesn't always have to start and end with the same note. However, the last note of a melody can help you guess the key in which that melody was written. For example, if we have a song and it ends with a C, than the key should be C major or minor. The chord formed on the tonic note -(the tonic being C, in our example) is the most significant chord in a key. To maintain the tonality, our song should finish with the C note (which is the first note of the tonic chord) and start with a note which is contained in the tonic chord (either C, E/Eb, or G). Most of the composers prefer to start with the first note of the chord, so that's why there numerous cases in which the music starts and ends with the same note.
The Tonic
A chord that is tonic is the 1 or I chord of the music that you are playing. It is the key of the music that you are playing. If the tonic is C major then you would be playing in the key of C major and dominant or 5 chord would be G major.