A chord with the fourth in it. C fourth chord is C F and A, although, it's not really called a fourth, it's called a suspension or suspended chord.
A chord with the fourth in it. C fourth chord is C F and A, although, it's not really called a fourth, it's called a suspension or suspended chord.
F major
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
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.
The note names in a major chord and a minor chord are the same. The only difference is the flattened third. F major chord is F A C where f minor is F Ab C.
CEG make up a C Major chord
The C Major chord is made up of the notes C, E and G.
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
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
The answer to this question is not always simple, however if you want a definite answer, look at the tips below: If you wanted to end on a perfect cadence, you should modulate to a G major chord and then move down to the tonic chord (C major). If you wanted to end on a plagal cadence, you would modulate up a fourth to a F major chord and then resolve on a C major chord. If you wanted to end on am imperfect cadence you simply modulate to the dominant chord (in this case G major) and end there. Finally, if you wanted to end on an interrupted cadence you modulate from the tonic chord (C major) to the relative minor, an A minor chord. So in most cases a song which began in C major should end in the tonic key (C major), however a song in C major can end in G major (an imperfect cadence) or in A minor (an interrupted cadence). Hope this helps.
No.
A major chord is the first, third, and fifth of any major scales. Example: C, E, G is a C major chord.
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.
The note names in a major chord and a minor chord are the same. The only difference is the flattened third. F major chord is F A C where f minor is F Ab C.
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.
C# e a
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
CEG make up a C Major chord
C E G Bb