Q. could you please answer with the notes in these chords.
you dont have to answer all.
Em9
D9
C9
Em9/D
Em9/C
Em
Dm/F
C/G
Gm
they're on piano
is Em (9) the same as Em9 but just written differently?
and finally what exactly is Em9/D , Em9/C?
oh and 10 points to anyone who answers seriously :)
Prince M :],
normally i dont reply to hate comments but im not raping any little boys at the moment so i have nothing else to do.
So im a 'geek/nerd/really butty loser from high school who doesn't have any cliche he can call his own and just messes up with anyone on Y!A?'
firstly, im a girl. i didnt know piano was a nerdy thing to do, if i did i wouldnt have learned it, just so i can please you!
i never knew there was anything wrong with being smart or playing an instrument.
secondly, how short is your memory? first im a 'loser in high school' and now im a 'really ********* Y Pervert!'?
do you self a favour and stop banging your head on the bed head when you get ploughed by your giant, hairy sister who is actually your mother.
what kind of person goes through other users answers and then calls them a 'L'?
seriously...
seeing as you called me fat, i suppose im going to go eat some cake now.
i hope you get raped by a hairy lesbien who hot pockets you.
goodbye.
A. Em9 - E,F#,G,B - This is going to sound a little strange. If you play E and G with your left hand and play F# and B with your right, it sounds okay. You know chords can be split between the two hands. You also have the option of playing F instead of F#. F would be the minor 9th, but since it's a minor chord anyway, a minor 9th would sound good.
D9 - D,E,F#,A - This sounds okay in a higher register - above middle C. If you play it lower, I would play D,F#,A with my left and E and F# with the right.
C9 - C,E,G left C,D,G right - this sounds good. The D in this chord is the 9th.
Em9/D This is easy. The slash and then note just means you begin on the note after the slash. D is the 7th for E. So this would be D,E,F#,G,B (However since it's an Em alot of people would play the ninth also as a minor, so it would be an F, not an F#) The thing with ninths is you end up playing three notes in a row, in this case with the seventh - four notes in a row. You just have to experiment and see how you can make it sound okay - using two hands and switching inversions. An inversion is the order. There are three inversions.
Like with a C chord - The first inversion is C,E, G
The second inversion is E, G, C
The thired is G, C, E
Em9/C C,E,F,G,B (You could also play a D, since the D would be the 7th and anytime you have a 9th you can also play the 7th) The only set rule for this one is that is has to start with C. So the bottom note of the left hand has to be C. Try it different ways. CDF - left CE right sounds okay. Of course this leaves out the B, but sometimes you have to play it a little different to get it to sound okay.
Em - E,G,B When I play it I play it E,G,B,D - Technically the D makes it a 7th, but it sounds good.
Dm/F - F,A,D - Again if you play it as a 7th it sounds better. Add the C. F,A,C,D I like minor chords with 7th's
C/G - G,C,E
Gm - G,Bb,D
I don't know if Em (9) is the same as Em9
There is a book called "Ultimate Keyboard Chord Book" You can get it at any music store that sells instruments and books. Its by the Hal Leonard Corporation. It has all the chords.
Chords are based on scales. The basic chord is 1st, 3rd, 5th.
A 9th is really the 2nd note.
So the C scale is C,D,E,F,G,A,B,C
The 9th is D
They call it the 9th because they are thinking of it as being in the next octave. So it would be 7 notes above the 2nd note.
Here are the scales
C - C,D,E,F,G,A,B,C
D - D,E,F#,G,A,B,C#,D
E - E,F#,G#,A,B,C#,D#,E
F - F,G,A,Bb,C,D,E,F
G - G,A,B,C,D,E,F#,G
A - A,B,C#,D,E,F#,G#,A
B - B,C#,D#,E,F#,G#,A#,B
The basic chord is 1,3, 5
The ninth is the second
The seventh is the seventh
The 11th is the fourth
The 13th is the 6th
There are also scales for the flats - Bb, Db, Eb, Gb,Ab
Without writing them all out, just think of it this way. Think of the chord with the same letter but not flat. Like for a Bb, think of B. Now which notes were a half step higher? In B, the notes a half step higher are C,D, F, G, and A because those notes were all sharps. So for Bb, those notes would also be a half step higher, meaning, C,D,F,G and A would be played as regular notes and B and E would be flat. So for any scale, the flat scale would play the regular notes as flats and the sharps would become the regular notes. Like in D - you have C# and F# - So for Db- C and F would be regular, everything else would be flat.
Db - Db,Eb,F, Gb,Ab,Bb,C
I'm yours Jason Mraz Chord/Tabs?
Q. I'm yours Jason Mraz Chord/Tabs?
Do not post link if you want 10 points. Post the tabs from your link. Do not and I repeat DO NOT post link. Post the tabs. If the tabs are to big then send it to my email or pm me. I will give you 10 points. If pmed or emailed to me you will get 50 points. There are 5 exact copies of this question. Good luck.
P.S
If none of you put up link. I have 5 accounts and will make them all vote no best answer.
I mean one* not none.
A. i hope this helps If you want it in Piano i have it as well
Capo 2nd Fret
A
Well you done done me and you bet I felt it,
E
I tried to be cool but you're so hot that I melted,
F#m
I fell right through the cracks,
D
And now I'm tryin to get back....
A
Before the cool dun run out, Ill be givin it my bestest
E
And Nothin's gonna stop me but divine intervention
F#m
I reckon its again my turn,
D D9
To Win some or learn some....
A E
But I wont hesitate
F#m
No more, No more
D D9 A E F#m D D9
It can not wait; I'm Yours
2nd Verse:
A E
Well open up your mind and see like me
F#m
open up your plans & then your free
D
look into your heart and you'll find love love love
A E
Listen to the music of the moment come and sing with me
F#m
a la peacfull melody
D D9
It's our god forsaken right to be loved loved loved loved loved
(repeat Chorus) except last word (im sure)
(chorus 2:)
A E
There's no need to complicate
F#m
Our time is short
D D9
This is our fate i'm yours..
Adlib: C A E F#m C#m Bm D D9 twice
3rd Verse: (Same as other Verses)
(Chorus 1 & 2)
that's it!
Jazzers please help me!!! Chord analysis of Charlie Parker's solo in Yardbird Suite?
Q. I'm just starting jazz so I don't understand all this stuff. (I have a classical music background tho so I understand all the chord notations and what they mean, ex: Emi75b.)
I looked it up online and I found this site:
http://forums.allaboutjazz.com/showthread.php?t=29866
This is basically what they said:
"C/Ab7/C Bb/A7/D7/G7/C Ed/D-7 G7/ for the first A section, with the last three chords at the second ending, the second A section, as /G7/C/F#-7 B7/.
B section is /E-7/B7/E-7/A7/D-7/A7/D7/G/.
Last A section is /C/Ab7/C Bb7/A7/D7/G7/C/C/.
As I play it on the piano this sounds right to me, and this is what you would solo on, the whole thing. A-A-B-A."
Then someone else said:
"I'm not so sure about that Ab7 ..every time I've either or played it ( or one of two charts I've written on it ) I preferred:
||: C /Fmi11 Bb 75b / Emi75b Bb7add13 /A9 / C/D D9 /Dmi 7 G79b
|| : ( 1. ) C A7 /
Dmi G7 :||
||: (2) C /F#mi5b B7 ||
..and then the bridge basically as you have it, except the first 4 ..
Emi6 /F#mi5b B7 / Emi7 / A7"
I need just the chords for the first sax solo in the song (I'm assuming it's Charlie Parker's solo, because it's the longest solo, 32 bars). Right after this solo there's a trumpet solo I think.
I don't understand what they said on that website. I don't understand where they're starting from.... I don't have a fake book either. Basically my question is, which ones are the chords for the first 32-bar solo (which I am assuming is Charlie Parker's)??? Also I'm assuming each / means a bar line, and that it's the next measure. Right? Which parts are they talking about with the A A B A thing? Which part is the bridge? So confused!!! Help!!!
So written all out, according to the first person, it would be this:
First A section:
C/Ab7/C Bb/A7/D7/G7/C Ed/D-7 G7/
Second A section:
C/Ab7/C Bb/A7/D7/G7/C/F#-7 B7/
B section:
/E-7/B7/E-7/A7/D-7/A7/D7/G/
Last A section:
/C/Ab7/C Bb7/A7/D7/G7/C/C/
Right? So how would I change that to go with what the second person said? The guy who "wasn't so sure about that Ab7 (etc)"? How do I change the chords I wrote to be the chords he wrote? Which chords do I change?
A. Yes you are right The song is A_A_B_A. When parker does his solo he does 4 measures 8 times. Notice hs phrasing. The one you got the first time "C/Ab7/C Bb/A7/D7/G7/C Ed/D-7 G7/ for the first A section, with the last three chords at the second ending, the second A section, as /G7/C/F#-7 B7/.
B section is /E-7/B7/E-7/A7/D-7/A7/D7/G/.
Last A section is /C/Ab7/C Bb7/A7/D7/G7/C/C/.
As I play it on the piano this sounds right to me, and this is what you would solo on, the whole thing. A-A-B-A" is correct.
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