F major has F, A and C in it. You may know where these notes are. If not, below is a description of how to play an F major chord for someone with no previous knowledge.
Sit in front of the piano, somewhere in the middle. If you look at the keys, you will see that the black keys come in twos and threes. Find a group of three black notes somewhere on your left. Pick out the black note that is furthest to the left of these three. Then, with your left hand, play the white note that touches the left hand side of the black note that you picked out. This is an F.
The pattern of notes is repeated along the piano, so the white key to the left of any group of three black notes is an F.
Find another F somewhere on your right. Then imagine that each white key has a number, and these increase by 1 with each note to the right. So the F that you picked out is 1, the white one immediately to the right is 2, the next one is 3 and so on. With you right hand, play numbers 1, 3 and 5 all at the same time (you will need to use your thumb and two fingers for this). This is an F major chord.
Play all four notes together (the F with your left hand, and the three notes with your right hand) and .... ta-dah! F major, with an F in the bass.
an F9 chord on the piano is where you have the f major chord (F A C) and just add the 9th to it (which in this case is a G)
A♯, Cx (double sharp) and E♯ (F).
I'll take a stab at this. If you mean "What's the difference between a D chord and a chord that's written as D/F#," here is the answer: A D chord consists of D, F#, and A. A D/F# chord means a D chord with a F# in the bass line. Normally, the bass plays the root of the chord or a leading note to that note, but sometimes composers want something different. On a piano a D chord would normally be played D, F#, A with the right hand, and a D with the left hand, but D/F# would be played D, F#, A with the right hand and an F# with the left. D/F# is sometimes referred to as "D over F#"
It depends on what you mean by the question. I think that you mean the chord Bm, when you see it over lyrics or some other such thing: The "Bm" symbol indicates a chord with the notes B - D - F# in that order.
the root of a f chord could be f i hope!
an F9 chord on the piano is where you have the f major chord (F A C) and just add the 9th to it (which in this case is a G)
(This is based on strumming) Verse 1: C chord (C, E, G) Am Chord (A, C, E) F chord (F, A, C) G chord (G, B, D) X2 Chorus (Played as chords; like verses): C Have I found you? Am F G Flightless Bird, Jealous, Weeping C Or lost you Am American Mouth F G Big bill Looming Verse 2: C Chord, Am Chord, F Chord, G Chord, X2 Repeat Chorus And thats it, I have basically converted guitar chords to piano chords. I have no idea if its right you will just have to try it and find out :)
The notes in a B5 chord would eliminate the the D sharp note and just play the B and the F sharp
A♯, Cx (double sharp) and E♯ (F).
I'll take a stab at this. If you mean "What's the difference between a D chord and a chord that's written as D/F#," here is the answer: A D chord consists of D, F#, and A. A D/F# chord means a D chord with a F# in the bass line. Normally, the bass plays the root of the chord or a leading note to that note, but sometimes composers want something different. On a piano a D chord would normally be played D, F#, A with the right hand, and a D with the left hand, but D/F# would be played D, F#, A with the right hand and an F# with the left. D/F# is sometimes referred to as "D over F#"
c chord, d chord and the g chord
It depends on what you mean by the question. I think that you mean the chord Bm, when you see it over lyrics or some other such thing: The "Bm" symbol indicates a chord with the notes B - D - F# in that order.
the root of a f chord could be f i hope!
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 C and F chord
Concert F chord.
If you are in the key of F then your song should end on an F chord.