Sunday, August 21, 2011

How To Learn Piano Chords

By Andy Penbram


If you have elected to learn how to play the piano at home as opposed to going to a personal piano tutor then you'll most certainly have obtained a distance learning course online or a piano learning DVD. The very first thing you may learn is how to find all the notes on the keyboard and the way to play one or two basic melodies. The next step is to start to learn certain fundamental chords... Playing recognisable tunes along with chords places you on the right track to becoming a real piano player. In most situations this occurs pretty quickly.

Piano chord basics are all that's needed at this early stage and piano chords are essentially very easy to play. The most straightforward piano chord consists of only three notes. Also, in its simplest form the base or first of these 3 notes is the note of the name of the chord itself. This means that for a C chord, the note at the bottom will be C itself.

The subsequent notes are very simple also... Simply go up 2 and then 2 once more. This means that from the base of C for instance, you move up two notes to the E and then 2 more up to the G. Therefore the notes of the C chord are C, E, G.

When you start to play other chords it might become a little more complex due to the flats and sharps. In the key of D as an example the F is usually played as F sharp so that the chord of D is, D F sharp A. The pattern of this basic chord however will remain the same. The bass of the chord then move up 2 and up two again.,, as straightforward as that.

Insert a bass note and a little rhythm to these chords and you'll be playing good sounding music in a flash. You will find it pretty easy to remember the patterns of each chord but simply to be certain you get it right there is is a chord sheet available on my web page to set you straight. This shows you the indispensable notes that each chord consists of.




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