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  2. Major chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_chord

    3-11 / 9-11. In music theory, a major chord is a chord that has a root, a major third, and a perfect fifth. When a chord comprises only these three notes, it is called a major triad. For example, the major triad built on C, called a C major triad, has pitches C–E–G: Audio playback is not supported in your browser.

  3. Royal road progression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_road_progression

    IV M7 –V 7 –iii 7 –vi chord progression in C. Play ⓘ One potential way to resolve the chord progression using the tonic chord: ii–V 7 –I. Play ⓘ. The Royal Road progression (王道進行, ōdō shinkō), also known as the IV M7 –V 7 –iii 7 –vi progression or koakuma chord progression (小悪魔コード進行, koakuma kōdo shinkō), [1] is a common chord progression within ...

  4. Overtones tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtones_tuning

    When the guitar is strummed without fretting even one string, a C-major chord is sounded. By barring all of the strings for one fret (from one to eleven), one finger suffices to fret the other eleven major-chords. Flattening this open tuning's open-note E to E ♭ changes the open chord from C-major to C-minor, so producing the cross-note tuning

  5. Regular tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_tuning

    Regular tunings. For regular guitar-tunings, the distance between consecutive open-strings is a constant musical-interval, measured by semitones on the chromatic circle. The chromatic circle lists the twelve notes of the octave. Makes it difficult to play music written for standard tuning.

  6. Hexatonic scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexatonic_scale

    Since blue notes are alternate inflections, strictly speaking there can be no one blues scale, [8] but the scale most commonly called "the blues scale" comprises the minor pentatonic scale and an additional flat 5th scale degree: C E ♭ F G ♭ G B ♭ C. [9] [10] [11]

  7. All fourths tuning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_fourths_tuning

    The standard tuning's irregular major-third is replaced by a perfect fourth in all-fourths tuning, which has the open notes E2-A2-D3-G3-C4-F4. The note layouts on the fretboard of a guitar tuned in perfect 4ths, with arrows that show where the same note continues on a higher-pitched string.

  8. Variations on a Theme of Chopin (Rachmaninoff) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variations_on_a_Theme_of...

    Rachmaninoff uses only the first 8 bars plus end-chord, and changes the E ♭ in the last chord of bar 3 to E ♮. Variations on a Theme of Chopin ( Russian: Вариации на тему Ф. Шопена, Variatsii na temu F. Shopena ), Op. 22, is a group of 22 variations on Frédéric Chopin 's Prelude in C minor ( Op. 28, No. 20 ), composed ...

  9. F major - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F_major

    F major is the home key of the English horn, the basset horn, the horn in F, the trumpet in F and the bass Wagner tuba. Thus, music in F major for these transposing instruments is written in C major. Most of these sound a perfect fifth lower than written, with the exception of the trumpet in F which sounds a fourth higher.