On a piano, the basic 3-note minor chord (minor triad) is made with the Root, the Minor Third, and the Perfect Fifth. For D minor, that would be D (usually with the thumb), F (usually with the middle finger), and A (usually with the pinky).
According to many people there are 12 "common" chords, however, there are many chord combinations. A chord can be any two or more notes, so a chord can have 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or more notes. With that number of combinations, chord possibilities are almost limitless.
You can't play G minor or any other chord on a recorder because to play a chord, you have to be able to sound at least 3 notes at the same time - and you can only play one note at a time on a recorder. BUT, you CAN play the three notes that make up G minor one at a time which are G, B flat, and D. This effectively creates the same feel as playing a G minor chord.
There are a minimum of 2 notes in a chord, although, most chords have 3 or more.
no Actually, it depends on what you mean. A flute is a single note instrument, so a single flute cannot play a chord. However, the notes are the same, because a standard flute is a concert pitched instrument, so a C on the piano is a C on the flute, therefore, a C chord on the piano is a C chord on the flute. the difference is, it takes 3 flutes to play a tried, but a single piano can play a triad.
1. 3. 5. notes; A C E
The fingering for an A minor chord on the piano is typically played with the right hand using fingers 1, 2, and 3 on the keys A, C, and E respectively.
The minor scale chord formula is 1-3-5, which means you take the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the minor scale to build a chord.
There are two or more notes in a chord. Guitar chords usually have three notes... look on wikipedia.com and look up guitar chords or musical chords or something Piano chords are usually 3 notes. Minor addition: "Chords" aren't usually three notes. Triads are three notes, but a chord can be any number of notes, 2 or more.
According to many people there are 12 "common" chords, however, there are many chord combinations. A chord can be any two or more notes, so a chord can have 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or more notes. With that number of combinations, chord possibilities are almost limitless.
You can't play G minor or any other chord on a recorder because to play a chord, you have to be able to sound at least 3 notes at the same time - and you can only play one note at a time on a recorder. BUT, you CAN play the three notes that make up G minor one at a time which are G, B flat, and D. This effectively creates the same feel as playing a G minor chord.
Find any group of 3 black notes, place your thumb on the 1st black note, your 3rd on the A key and your pinky on the C♯, play all 3 notes together then you get the F♯ minor chord.
There are a minimum of 2 notes in a chord, although, most chords have 3 or more.
no Actually, it depends on what you mean. A flute is a single note instrument, so a single flute cannot play a chord. However, the notes are the same, because a standard flute is a concert pitched instrument, so a C on the piano is a C on the flute, therefore, a C chord on the piano is a C chord on the flute. the difference is, it takes 3 flutes to play a tried, but a single piano can play a triad.
1. 3. 5. notes; A C E
It's a triad.
generally, 3 to 5 notes at one time is called a chord. Two notes together is just an interval of some sort, depending upon how close the notes are together on a piano (second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth or seventh)
A chord is formed when multiple pitches (notes on a musical instrument) are placed together on a staff (a sheet of music). Chords come in a lot of different varieties, including (but not limited to): Major chords, minor chords, diminished chords, augmented chords, seventh chords, and Neapolitan chords. To develop a chord, one simply takes two or more notes from the staff and (in the case of piano or string instruments) plays them simultaneously. For instance: C-E-G is a C Major triad (triad is just a fancy term for a chord with three notes). F-A-C is an F Major triad. When you listen to music, the harmony parts behind the leading melody are generally chords. Rock groups like "Queen" are notorious for having a lot of harmonized parts in their music. Every song from every genre has a chord progression - meaning one chord follows the next in a pattern. Rock is generally I-IV-V-I (Roman Numerals denote the type of chord used) used over and over.