If you mean what are the notes, it's E, G#, and B.
Added: if you mean an E major chord.
The Italian chord is a dominant seventh chord without the fifth of the chord. C E Bb
This would be a diminished triad chord. A normal A minor chord would be A, C, and E. Flat the E and you get E flat (or D sharp), making a diminished triad.
It depends on what the chord progression is. Just about any chord will work depending on what the melody sounds like or what chord progression is.
Any chord CAN be lower depending on how it's played. For example: If you play an A chord above the E chord, it's higher, however, if you play that same A chord an octave lower, it's lower.
E Major!
Well yes but I do not recommend it. Here is how I would do it tune the E of the E chord to the A of the D Chord (major 5th) tune the G# of the E chord to the D of the D chord (tri-tone - you will know its right _ when it sounds bad Tune the A of the E chord to the A of the D chord
You add an extra note into the original minor chord. An A minor chord consists of the notes A - C - E. The Am7 chord consists of A - C - E - G
Yes. The lowercase is minor and the uppercase is major.
The E-major triad is composed of an E, a G#, and a B. To make this chord minor, flat the G#.
The Italian chord is a dominant seventh chord without the fifth of the chord. C E Bb
A diminished chord is a chord made up of 3 notes, with each being three semitones higher than the last. In this case, E diminished would be E, G, Bb. A suspended chord is a chord that hasn't yet been resolved. For instance, E, A, B would be an E chord with a suspended fourth, as the A hasn't resolved to a G# to make E major, or a G to make E minor. Thus, E diminished is not the same thing as E suspended.
This would be a diminished triad chord. A normal A minor chord would be A, C, and E. Flat the E and you get E flat (or D sharp), making a diminished triad.
In the Jun gle the migh ty jun gle the li on sleeps to night R hand: c d e d e f e d c d e d c e d L hand: C chord----------->F chord------------>C chord-------->G chord In the Jun gle the migh ty jun gle the li on sleeps to night R hand: g f e d f e d c c d e g g g g L hand: C chord----------->F chord------------>C chord-------->G chord Chords are: C chord: c+e+g F chord: f+a+c G chord: g+b+d You can also play this by starting on g and using the chords G, C, G, Hope this has helped you.
Means it's a chord were C is the fundamental note. The fundamental note, is the note from were the chord is constructed. So if it's a C major chord, it could be C E G or C E G B
E, Gb, and Bb.
Left Hand: Intro Chord (IN ORDER) E Chord (E, G#, B) A Chord (A, C#, E) B Chord (B, D#, F#) Left Hand: Verse (IN ORDER) E Chord (E, G#, B) B Chord (B, D#, F#) C# Chord (C#, E, G#) A Chord (A, C#, E) Left Hand: Pre/Chorus (IN ORDER) E Chord (E, G#, B) A Chord (A, C#, E) C# Chord (C#, E, G#) B Chord (B, D#, F#) Right Hand Melody: Verse: E E E E E E C# B E E E E E E- F# G# F# E E E E E E C# B E E E E E E- F# G# F# Pre-Chorus: E G# B C# C# B G# B G# F# E G# B C# C# B G# F# Chorus: G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# G# F# E E G# A G# G# G# A G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# E G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# G# F# E E E E E E E F# G# F# G# F# E E G# A G# G# G# A G# F# E G# A G# G# G# A G# F# E
It depends on what the chord progression is. Just about any chord will work depending on what the melody sounds like or what chord progression is.