I always play an A-chord, with a C in the bass. I should note an A-chord with a bass-C sounds rather dissonant. An A-minor/C or a A/C# would be more logical.
There are 8 c naturals on a normal piano but there are 7 c sharps
on what because if its on the piano its a D On the piano, it is a D, or C#.
The third C up from the bottom (left) of the piano; it is the C below Middle C.
There are 3 octaves till middle C on the piano.
The last note on a piano is an A.
/s/
To play slash chords on the piano, you need to play a specific chord with a different note in the bass. For example, if you see a chord written as C/G, you would play a C major chord with a G note in the bass. This creates a different sound and adds variety to your playing.
forward slash - division operator backward slash - special character (e.g. \n - newline) in C strings
C flat-the lower version of C and is the same as B
In the middle. I mean, I think middle C depends on the piano, and the normal middle C is on an 88 key piano. I would look for it in the middle of any keyboard.
"Le" means "the" in French, and "slash" refers to the forward slash (/) symbol. So "le SLASH vel" would mean "the vel forward slash" in a mixture of French and English.
If the slash is /, it means to divide in most cases
There are 8 c naturals on a normal piano but there are 7 c sharps
A c is located on a piano setting by every to black keys.
on what because if its on the piano its a D On the piano, it is a D, or C#.
The third C up from the bottom (left) of the piano; it is the C below Middle C.
the / forward slash means or