That's a 'chord' of a circle. If the chord happens to pass through the center of the circle, then it's called a 'diameter', and no chord of the same circle can be longer.
a chord lets people play three or more notes in a note
If a line segment touches two points on the circle it is called as: 1. secant; if the line extends outside the circle. 2. chord; if the line is present only within the circle. Diameter is a line which satisfies the second condition hence it is a chord. The additional condition for a chord to be known as diameter is that the chord should pass through the center of the circle!
it can be called the diameter of the circle. or a chord
The chord that runs through the middle of a circle is called the diameter.
triad
Depends on the chord.
no
three-note chord (apex)
The III note is A. However, the 3rd note in the chord is the V note. That is C. The F major chord is F, A, C.
At a x1 multiplier: * 50 points for a single note. * 100 points for a 2 note chord. * 150 points for a 3 note chord.
I think it was called an 'Arpeggio'
Supertonic - tonic cadence = Chord 2 followed by chord 1. You should only have two notes in the treble of chord 1. Make sure that the bass part and leading note go to the tonic and add the 3rd note of the chord somewhere in the treble.
That is called the "base" of the chord. Try not to get this word confused with "root," which is the lowest note of the chord if it is in root position. Root position is when the chord is built up in thirds. Ex: C, E and G make up the C chord and the root of the chord "C" is also the base note. If this same C chord is mixed around so that G is the lowest note then higher in order is C and then E, then G would be the base note of the chord.
When a number is displayed after a chord, it means that you add that number of the scale of the chord you're playing to the chord as an addition, so actually, note number 8 on a guitar is the same as 1. And a major chord already has the note numbers 1,3,and 5 in the chord. In a nutshell, whoever told you that you needed to play a "b8" doesn't know a thing about music theory, because a regular b chord already has that scale # in it. But a B chord would go like this: -----2------ -----4------ -----4------ -----4------ -----2------ -----2------
There are 3 times where this terminology will come into play. the first is in relation to a single note in the chord. a "dissonant" note is normally a 1/2 step or a tritone (augmented 4th) away from a chord tone, creating an unstable or tense sounding interval or chord. for instance if you play an Ab over a C major Chord, you will notice dissonance because Ab is one 1/2step from G (the fifth of the chord).Note that this terminology can only relate a note to a chord. that is a note cannot be dissonant in relation to nothing, it's classification is dependent on the chord it is surrounded by. a consonant note merely belongs in the chord, it is a chord tone or other note in the key signature that does not result in tension. C E G are all consonant notes in a C Chord (but they are all dissonant in an F# chord) The second is in relation to a chord itself. if a chord has one or more dissonant notes it sounds tense/unstable and can be called a dissonant chord, where a consonant chord sounds stable. The third is in relation to an entire piece or phrase. this is entirely arbitrary as a piece can have dozens of dissonant chords, but progress and resolve in such a way for it to sound stable. or vice versa, a piece may have many consonant chords but not resolve, or end on a dissonant chord to give an overall dissonant impression.
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