Q. can anyone give me piano chords for I will be right here waiting for you , just the easy ones like Cm D E F#m not the ones like Cadd9 D7sus4 or Gaug
i have found chords but they are hard, can anyone give me easier ones? thanks!
A. in C major it would be this : G Am F G C
I tried my best. that's how i play it just that i use broken chords instead of full ones
what are the piano notes for like you do?
Q. like you do by angle taylor is great and i want to play it on piano but i cant find the notes for it..if you know them please tell me or tell me where to find them!! <3
A. Angel Taylor - Like You Do
Capo 3rd
Chords - E A D G B E
G - 3 2 0 0 3 3
D - X X 0 2 3 3
Am - X 0 2 2 1 0
Cadd9 - X 3 2 0 3 3
Em7M - 0 2 1 0 0 0
Em - 0 2 2 0 0 0
Em7 - 0 2 0 0 0 0
A - X 0 2 2 2 0
Intro:
G - D - Am - Cadd9 X2
Verse 1:
G D Am
Boy you know it's bad when you do that
Cadd9
but you don't care
G D Am
holding out exactly what I want
Cadd9
but you won't share
Pre-Chorus:
Am D
And I've never had a taste before
Am Cadd9
but now you've got me wanting more
Chorus:
G
You're playin' it cool, I know what you do
D Am
I feel like a fool, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9
cause nobody loves me
G
You're messing around, I figured you out
D Am
You're taking me down, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9 G - D - Am - Cadd9
cause nobody loves me, like you do.
Verse 2:
G D Am
And boy you know it's wrong when you do that
Cadd9
but you go there
G D Am
Feeling all your fingers sliding slowly
Cadd9
through my hair
Pre-Chorus:
Am D
And I've never had a taste before
Am Cadd9
but now you've got me wanting more
Chorus:
G
You're playin' it cool, I know what you do
D Am
I feel like a fool, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9
cause nobody loves me
G
You're messing around, I figured you out
D Am
You're taking me down, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9 (Two measures)
cause nobody loves me
Bridge: (Each two measures)
Em
Like you do
Em7M
Like you do
Em7
Like you do
A
Like you do
Cadd9
Ahh Yea
Verse 3:
G D Am
And boy you know it's bad when you do that
Cadd9 (Two measures)
But you, don't, care
Chorus:
G
You're playin' it cool, I know what you do
D Am
I feel like a fool, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9
cause nobody loves me
G
You're messing around, I figured you out
D Am
You're taking me down, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9 G
cause nobody loves me, you
Outro:
(G) D Am
Like you do, Like you do
Cadd9
Cause nobody loves me
G
You're messing around, I figured you out
D Am
You're taking me down, but I would be feelin' it anyway
Cadd9 (Hold) G (Hold)
Boy you know it's bad when you do that
How do they name chords?
Q. I have a book that shows all the chords on the piano but I have no idea where they got the names from. I understand what inversion means by looking at the patterns but I have no idea what the other stuff is. Like Csus4, C6, C7,C(degree sign)7,C minor 7 flat 5. What does the sus mean? What do the numbers mean? What does 7 flat 5 mean?
A. Chord Naming
http://www.standingstones.com/chordname.html
Usually the lowest note played becomes the letter the chord is named after (there are some exceptions eg inverted chords and slash chords but that is not important right now) - the other notes determine what "type" of chord it is.
So say the lowest note I play is A, I know it is an A chord of some description (well almost always) and I can work out what type of A chord from the other notes if I know my major scales and my chord formulas.
If you skip ahead in PMT a few pages you will note that major chords have the formula 1, 3, 5 - minor chords have the formula 1, b3, 5 - this is consistant and you might see or hear of them referred to as a triad.
So say I'm playing a chord but don't know what to call it - the way to work it out is to identify the notes I'm playing. For the example, if the lowest note is A and I also work out that I am playing C#, E - I align that to the A major scale and I would see that I am playing the 1st, 3rd & 5th notes of the scale so therefore I would call it an A major chord NB in tabs a single letter eg "A" really means A major but by convention it isn't stated as such.
If I discovered I was playing A, C, E - I would still call it an A chord but when I compared it to the A major scale I would see that C would actully be a flat 3rd - so this would make it a minor chord and I would call it Am
Note the 3rd controls the character of the chord i.e. whether it is a major or a minor - straight 3 = major, b3 = minor
Often when we play major or minor chords we actually play more than 3 notes but that is because we duplicate some of the notes - take A major for example, we play the A open string (which gives the chord its name), E on the 4th string, A again on the 3rd string, C# on the 2nd string and the open E on the little e string but essentially all the notes are A, C#, E
Now for lots of other chord types we add in a fourth note (a quadad). So when you see D7 it really means D dominant seventh (not a minor seventh, a major seventh, or a diminished 7th) the formula for a dominant seventh chord is 1, 3, 5, b7
So in this case we use the D major scale and see that 1, 3, 5, b7 are the notes D, F#, A, C and we call this D7
If we played D, F#, A, C# that would equate to 1, 3, 5, 7 of the D major scale and that would be called a D major 7 chord.
D, F, A, C would be 1, b3, 5, b7 of the D major scale and would be a D minor 7 chord (note the b3 is calling the shots on it being a minor)
And so on, and so on - this is the same for all chords - as long as we know the chord formulas for the different types of chords and we know how to relate that to the relevant major scale then we can work out what notes to play if we see a chord on a tab but haven't learned that chord shape yet simply by applying the formula. Alternatively if we are playing a chord shape that someone has shown us but are not sure what to call it we can work it out, again by seeing what the notes are and seeing which formula it fits.
Now onto your Cadd9 - that just means add the 9th degree of the C scale to your C major chord - so instead of playing 1, 3, 5 or C, E, G we add in a D NB not the D at the 2nd degree of the scale but an octave higher at the 9th degree.
Sometimes you will see a "sus" chord - either a 2 or a 4. That just means suspend the 3rd (take it out) and replace it with the 2nd or the 4th. So this chord is neither major nor minor but is a sus chord.
All the common chord formulas are in PMT
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Title : I will be right here waiting for you piano chords
Description : Q. can anyone give me piano chords for I will be right here waiting for you , just the easy ones like Cm D E F#m not the ones like Cadd9 D...