It completely depends on what information is provided. If you have a melody, you can harmonise most lines using quite basic four part harmony. If so, you could also use inversions, most commonly being 1st inversion chords.
If you have chords for comping, then just comp to the complexity that you can manage. I suppose it depends on what kind of music it is. If it is jazz, you could add 7ths, 9ths etc. and even throw in some tritone substitution.
Ultimately, more information is needed to accurately help you. Regardless, for improvising accompaniments you should have a knowledge of harmony, be it jazz or standard classical harmony.
It would help alot if you learned some of the scales on the guitar and how they fit with the chords being played
"The unusual character of the G-minor Symphony is established in the first bar of the Allegro molto. The violas offer a brief but quietly restless introduction-or as Neal Zaslaw describes it, "an accompaniment waiting for a tune to accompany"-to the rhythmically propulsive first theme, which remains piano for sixteen bars, a rare occurrence in classical symphonies. Chromaticism flavours the melodies and harmonic structure of the entire piece. The second theme appears in the relative major key of B-flat in the exposition, but stays fixed in the tonic minor in the recapitulation, maintaining the dark mood to the end of the movement. In a musical sleight-of-hand at the recapitulation, the first theme slips in before the expected accompaniment, and we hear that familiar melody as from a different perspective, with a plaintive countermelody from the bassoon deepening its meaning." Source:http://www.analekta.com/en/album/Mozart-Symphonies-Nos-40-41.430.html
Piano Chords Major Keys Relative Minor Keys Signature C major A minor G major E minor D major B minor A major F# minor E major C# minor B major G# minor F# major D# minor C# major A# minor F major D minor Bb major G minor Eb major C minor Ab major F minor Db major Bb minor Gb major Eb minor Cb major Ab minor
The relative minor of a key signature is the key three semitones, and two letter names, below the major key in question. For example, the relative minor of A major is F# minor (three semitones, two letter names down). The relative minors of the correpsonding major keys are as follows: C - A minor Db - Bb minor D - B minor Eb - C minor E - C# minor F - D minor G# - Eb minor G - E minor Ab - F minor A - F# minor Bb - G minor B - G# minor
The parallel minor key is that which has the same tonic note. So, the parallel minor to F major is F minor.
It would help alot if you learned some of the scales on the guitar and how they fit with the chords being played
The answer depends on what information is provided: the volume, total surface area, principal diagonal, minor diagonal, etc.
False.
Yes, provided you meet the requirements.
IRS rules allow a guardian to claim the minor if the guardian provided more than 50% of the minor's support for that tax year.
You can review the Pennsylvania code that governs the appointment of guardians for a minor at the link provided below.
CIBIL dispute is nothing but in case if you find any errors in your report and feel that the information provided does not belong to you in that case you can raise a dispute with the CIBIL bureau to get it rectified. A minor error can also change your credit rating.
There are various legal aspects to having an underage child in your residence, but there is so little information provided, and state laws vary so much, that you need to speak to a local attorney.
You haven't provided your own age. It may be quite wrong especially if you are a minor.You haven't provided your own age. It may be quite wrong especially if you are a minor.You haven't provided your own age. It may be quite wrong especially if you are a minor.You haven't provided your own age. It may be quite wrong especially if you are a minor.
There are unclear views on this aspect of the law. Unfortunately, too many minor's continue to voluntarily post their own personal information on the web.
Remember the Name contains improper language, but a related link is provided.
As long as the minor is eligible to fly unaccompanied, the process is typically fairly simple. Most airlines will require the information of the person who is bringing the minor to the airport they will be leaving from, and the information of the person who will be picking the child up from the destination airport.