You go up the notes playing each one individually but holding them all down until the time it needs to take is over
All other notes are muted, so only the notes of the chosen chord are allowed to sound.
Depends on what you mean. If you mean a big run of notes up or down a piano or harp, then its a glissando. If you mean the notes of a chord, played after one another, its an arpeggio.
It means the dominant seventh chord. In C major this would comprise of the notes G B D and the seventh F
A minor chord is major third on top of a minor third. to make a minor chord take a major chord and move the middle note down a half step
Two quarter-downstrokes, two eighth down-and-up strokes, repeat as needed. (1 - 2 - 3& 4&) That's the best I can show without musical notes, on here.
All other notes are muted, so only the notes of the chosen chord are allowed to sound.
Depends on what you mean. If you mean a big run of notes up or down a piano or harp, then its a glissando. If you mean the notes of a chord, played after one another, its an arpeggio.
c chord, d chord and the g chord
It means the dominant seventh chord. In C major this would comprise of the notes G B D and the seventh F
A barre chord is a guitar chord played by pressing down multiple strings at the same time on the fretboard.
A minor chord is major third on top of a minor third. to make a minor chord take a major chord and move the middle note down a half step
Two quarter-downstrokes, two eighth down-and-up strokes, repeat as needed. (1 - 2 - 3& 4&) That's the best I can show without musical notes, on here.
Typically, the 6 string guitar is tuned on the notes EADGBE. If you strum across those strings without touching the fretboard you would have a Em7sus chord. Building the chord, we have root (E) 3rd (G) 5th (B) 7th (D) and the added 4 (A) which is a suspension note. To make other chords, you learn the theory of how to make a chord and then use your fingers to press down and change the open strings to something else that fits the chord that you are trying to make. Get a guitar chord chart and use that but it would help you tremendously to learn the theory to understand why each chord is what it is.
Start on "D" and hit every note along the way until you get to "A".
The longest chord possible in a circle is one that is from one point on the circumference to its opposite point i.e. a chord that bisects the circle. Or to put it simply one straight down the middle
The spinal chord.
Its not something you can just do automatically, because when you start off playing the piano, reading notes is one of the first things you learn. You read notes according to legger lines, and accordingly play them on the piano. I recommend sitting down and asking for the help of someone who knows how to play.