[musictlk] Piano chords
Rob Kaiser
rcubfank at sbcglobal.net
Sat Mar 29 17:07:50 UTC 2014
There's nothing like old fashion music theory. When I was at the American
Conservatory of Music in the late 70s and early 80s, I did all of my theory
classes privately and by ear. I wish I wold have had Braille music books to
learn it. As I emailed this listserve before, I was the first blind person
to ever go to this school. The powers that be didn't thik it was going to
work, but I proved them wrong when I had almost an a average the entire four
years I was there.
-----Original Message-----
From: Kaiti Shelton
Sent: Saturday, March 29, 2014 9:50 AM
To: Music Talk Mailing List
Subject: Re: [musictlk] Piano chords
Hi all,
Marissa: As explained, an open fifth is just the same as an interval
of a 5th. Think of it like this; in C major, you would play C, E, and
G as a root chord. Take out the E, and that's the open 5th. It just
has a slightly more open sound, but is more commonly used in pop
stuff. Inverted chords are just chords in different positions. Going
back to the C chord as an example, (C, E, and G), if you were to put
it in first inversion you would take the C from the bottom of the
chord and flip it to the top. A C chord in first inversion would be
E, G, and C. Second inversion is the same, only with the G on the
bottom; G, C, and E. Then you just go back to root position C, E, G.
Winona, I learned a lot of chord reading from How to Read Braille
Music. This book is really helpful, and I'd highly recommend getting
it so you can keep it around for quick reference. I also like it
because it has an index of the back you can use if you don't want to
flip through the pages to find the long explanation.
HTH
On 3/28/14, Linda Mentink <mentink at frontiernet.net> wrote:
> Marissa,
>
> An open fifth means only the two notes are played together, or two
> open strings are played on a stringed instrument. The strings are
> called open strings because no fingers are pressing the string on the
> finger board.
>
> At 11:38 AM 3/28/2014, you wrote:
>>Why do they call an open fifth an open fifth? And an invter chord?
>>Is there an easy way to play those?
>>
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--
Kaiti
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