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Lighter, happier, and bouncy music go with major scale. Dark, scary terrifying, and sad music go with minor scales.

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Q: Which sounds lighter a major chord or a minor chord?
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Which chord is lighter a major chord or a minor chord?

Generally, a minor chord has a darker sound.


What is a minor chord on the keyboard and how do you play one?

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


Is a minor chord a chord at the very left of the keyboard?

No. A minor chord is a chord played anywhere on the piano mainly using sharps which sounds sad or scary.


How do you make a F major chord into a F minor chord?

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.


What are the intervals between notes in a chord?

Depends on the chords you are talking about. Major chords have a major third then a minor chord Minor chords have a minor third and then a major chord Augmented chords have two major thirds Diminished chords have two minor thirds


Can you use a A minor chord instead of a c major chord?

No.


What is it called when there is a major chord after a minor part in a song?

It depends on context. If the piece continues in minor after the major chord, it was probably a half cadence on a major V chord. If the very last chord of a minor piece is major, that's called a Picardy 3rd.


Why can you use a B minor chord as the last chord in a progression in the key of F sharp major?

Firstly, there is no B minor chord in the key of F sharp minor. Rather, it is A sharp minor chord. And you can use any chord at the end of a chord progression. Why not!


When do you use which chord for harmonization?

Typically, the note of the scale that you are on will be the chord that you play. 1 major 2 minor 3 minor 4 major 5 dominant seventh 6 minor 7 diminished


Is there a difference between 'e' chord and 'E' chord?

Yes. The lowercase is minor and the uppercase is major.


Why in music do they use amajor sixth in a minor chord?

A minor 6th over a minor triad (spelled 'min(b6)' or 'min(b13)' sounds discordant due to the semitone interval between the 6th and the Perfect 5th. A minor triad with a major 6th (spelled 'min6') is preferable for this reason but it is also a relatively rare chord.


What are the Notes for bulletproof by la roux on keyboard?

- Introduction: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x + 6x in the Lyrics - Chorus: - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| (Instrumental) - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| -Back to Lyrics chords: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x -Back to Chorus: F# (F Sharp Major this time) G#m (G Sharp MINOR This Time) |2'nd Cord| B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| F# (F Sharp Major) (Back to F Sharp Major) Repeat 4x this time - BRIDGE: C# (C Sharp Major) / (Very QUICK switch from "C sharp major to D#m (D Sharp Minor which is the 2'nd chord) (Hold that note for a little longer as the song goes) (Then switch to "F#m" F Sharp "Major" then quickly go to: "G# (G Sharp Major) |then hold that note|. B (B Flat Major) |then hold that note as well| Then Back to the original chord to hold again: Which is: "D#m (D Sharp Minor) - Back to Instrumental: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x - Back to Chorus: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x this time! I hope this helps! Thanks! -Patrick! (ZitranzaTLK) Keyboardist/ Musician!