Learning Keyboard: How to achieve chord inversions on the keyboard By Noel Prashanth Published on: Chord inversions basically involve rotation, that is, for the C Major chord, instead of 1-3-5 C-E-G (root position), play E-G-C (1st inversion), and then G-C-E (2nd inversion). The same thing works in...
Learning Keyboard: Learn about accompaniment using block and broken chords By Noel Prashanth Published on: To illustrate the difference, play the C Major chord triad 1-3-5 with all fingers at once – that’s a block chord. As opposed to this, if you play the chord one finger at a time 1-3-5, then it ...
Learning Keyboard: Use a metronome to set and gradually increase the tempo By Noel Prashanth Published on: By pressing the metronome button, you should hear a 4-beat sort of sound. Your digital display will give a reading – larger the number, faster the tempo, smaller the number, slower the tempo. ...
Learning Keyboard: Identify chord relatives using the roman numeral system By Noel Prashanth Published on: The big roman numeral represents a major, and the small roman numeral a minor. This gives us an easy way to identify chord relatives in the C Major scale – (C Major, A Minor), (F Major, D Mino...
Learning Keyboard: Identify chord relatives using the roman numeral system By Noel Prashanth Published on: The big roman numeral represents a major, and the small roman numeral a minor. This gives us an easy way to identify chord relatives in the C Major scale – (C Major, A Minor), (F Major, D Mino...