G minor is G, B-flat, and D.
Am7 is A, C, E, and G
The C chord contains the notes C, E, and G. The C Minor chord contains the notes C, E Flat, and G.
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.
The notes to a c chord are c as the root, e as the third, and g as the fifth. The notes can vary, depending on the fact that the chrod could be augmented, diminished, major, or minor.
C Major chord = C E G
The key notes in a C minor chord are C, Eb, and G.
G, Bb, D, F
Am7 is A, C, E, and G
The E-major triad is composed of an E, a G#, and a B. To make this chord minor, flat the G#.
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
The chord of Em contains the notes E, G, and B. The scale of E minor contains the notes E, F♯, G, A, B, C, and D.
The C chord contains the notes C, E, and G. The C Minor chord contains the notes C, E Flat, and G.
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.
"G" Minor is an open "G" chord-THe same as the "A" Minor chord.
The notes to a c chord are c as the root, e as the third, and g as the fifth. The notes can vary, depending on the fact that the chrod could be augmented, diminished, major, or minor.
An Em7 is based on the notes: E (root) G (minor third) B (the fifth) D (the seventh)
C Major chord = C E G