The key notes in an E flat chord are E flat, G, and B flat.
No. E-flat is one half step LOWER than E.
E-flat Major: E-flat, G-natural, B-Flat E-flat minor: E-flat, G-flat, B-Flat
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.
This would be a diminished triad chord. A normal A minor chord would be A, C, and E. Flat the E and you get E flat (or D sharp), making a diminished triad.
The E-major triad is composed of an E, a G#, and a B. To make this chord minor, flat the G#.
A-flat C E-flat
Eb
Any chord CAN be lower depending on how it's played. For example: If you play an A chord above the E chord, it's higher, however, if you play that same A chord an octave lower, it's lower.
To play the C7 flat 9 piano chord, place your left hand on the C note, E note, and B flat note, and your right hand on the E flat note and A note. Play all the notes together to create the C7 flat 9 chord.
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.
E flat augmented raises the Bb to B natural.