- definition, any
chord with a non-diatonic
chord tone is an
altered chord. The
simplest example of
altered chords is the use of
borrowed chords,
chords borrowed...
-
intonation where the
unmarked C, F, and G
major chords are just
major chords (4:5:6) and
accidentals create just
tuning in
other keys.
Between 2000 and...
-
third and a
fifth above the root note.
Chords with more than
three notes include added tone
chords,
extended chords and tone clusters,
which are used in...
- to) a b**** note. The
numerals and
symbols (often
accidentals)
indicate intervals,
chords, and non-
chord tones that a
musician playing piano, harpsichord...
- VII
chords in a J. S. Bach-style chorale) are also not
likely to be
chosen as the
pivot chord. The most
common pivot chords are the
predominant chords (ii...
-
sounding [than the flat nine]." In jazz, 7♯9
chords,
along with 7♭9
chords, are
often emplo**** as the
dominant chord in a
minor ii–V–I turnaround. For example...
-
construct the
following chords,
which also may be
thought of as
borrowed from the
parallel minor: the
dominant minor ninth chord, the
fully diminished seventh...
-
tuned at a
frequency of 440
Hertz (Hz). The
chord progression follows F♯m / C♯m / E / B, with
accidental chords Dm, D, Bm, A and A♯. The song's modality...
-
there is an
accidental does not mean that it is
definitely a case of tonicization. Only
major and
minor chords may be tonicized.
Diminished chords and augmented...
- as
suspended chords do not
contain the
major (or minor) third. In a 1989 interview,
Walter Becker explained that the use of the
chord developed from...