To modulate from D major to E major, you can use a pivot chord that is common to both keys. A suitable pivot chord is A major, which functions as the V chord in D major and the IV chord in E major. Alternatively, you could use a direct modulation by moving to an E major chord after establishing the D major tonality, signaling the shift clearly. This modulation can also be enhanced with a leading tone, like C♯, that resolves up to D in the transition.
D major A major E minor
The chords E, Bm, A, and D are associated with the A major scale, and the key of A major. The primary A major chords are (with notes of the chords): I - A Major (A-C#-E) ii - B minor (B-D-F#) iii - C# minor (C#-E-G#) IV - D Major (D-F#-A) V - E Major (E-G#-B) vi - F# minor (F#-A-C#) vii° - G# diminished (G#-B-D) Octave - A Major (A-C#-E) To add one degree of complexity, the F# natural minor scale also uses the same chords, but they are labeled differently. i - F# minor (F#-A-C#) ii° - G# diminished (G#-B-D) bIII - A Major (A-C#-E) iv - B minor (B-D-F#) v - C# minor (C#-E-G#) bVI - D Major (D-F#-A) bVII - E Major (E-G#-B) Octave - F# minor (F#-A-C#)
You simply move the key down one half step
The key of D major is based off of the D major scale: D, E, F sharp, G, A, B, C sharp, D. Within the scale, the most important chords are D major (D, F sharp, A), E minor (E, G, B), F sharp minor (F sharp, A, C sharp), G major (G, B, D), A (A, C sharp, E), and B minor (B, D, F sharp). If you are feeling really crafty, you can add a seventh to some of the chords to give it a more interesting sound. If you are writing a song, using these chords will keep it in the key of D. If you are transposing a song, lower or raise the entire song the same number of steps until you are using mostly (if not all) the chords in the key of D.
e major
The chords for "Tracy Beaker" theme song on the keyboard are E minor, C major, G major, and D major.
The chords in the key of D minor are D minor, E diminished, F major, G minor, A minor, Bb major, and C major.
D major A major E minor
The chords in the key of E minor are E minor, F diminished, G major, A minor, B minor, C major, and D major.
The guitar chords for the key of E minor are E minor, A minor, B minor, C major, D major, and G major.
In my experience, the easiest set of piano chords to play on the piano are the major scales. C Major: C-E-G D Major: D-F#-A E Major E-G♭-B F Major: F-A-C G Major: G-B-D A Major: A-C♭-E B Major: B-D♭-F# Well that's the basic major chords which is the easiest in all of them.
Some common chords used in open D tuning are D major, G major, A major, B minor, and E minor.
Some common 6 string chords used in guitar playing are the E major, A major, D major, G major, C major, and E minor chords.
The chords in D sharp major are D major, E diminished, F minor, G major, A major, B minor, and C diminished. These chords are formed by taking the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the D major scale and stacking them on top of each other.
You simply move the key down one half step
The chords in the key of E flat major are E flat major, F minor, G minor, A flat major, B flat major, C minor, and D diminished.
The chords in the key of A major are A major, B minor, C minor, D major, E major, F minor, and G diminished.