These are the “cheat” chords I played…
Part 1a: FM7 - G/F - Em7 - Am7
Part 1b: Dm7 - F/G - C - Bb/C
Part 1c: FM7 - G/F - Em7 - Am7 - A7/C#
Part 1d: Dm7 - Fm6 - F/G - C4 - C
hi,sorry to interrupt, I wanna ask whats the difference between Aminor and CMajor, will the chords played be different in a song in A minor and a song in C Major?
Hi LCK, sorry for the late reply. Have been away over the Chinese New Year! An “A minor” triad is made of up A-C-E notes, whereas a “C major” triad is made up of C-E-G notes.
Did you mean key for a song?
Usually keys are not referred to as major or minor, though a song may have a major or minor sound to it.
For example, a lot of people refer to a song to be played in “A minor”. Actually that should be a song in “C key”.
If that is what you mean, then yes, the chords are of the same family. You will find in both, chords like F, G, Em, Am, and C, etc.
In the minor song, you will also find E or E7 probably more often than in the major song.
I hope I answered your question. :b
hi,sorry to interrupt, I wanna ask whats the difference between Aminor and CMajor, will the chords played be different in a song in A minor and a song in C Major?
Hi LCK, sorry for the late reply. Have been away over the Chinese New Year!
An “A minor” triad is made of up A-C-E notes, whereas a “C major” triad is made up of C-E-G notes.
Did you mean key for a song?
Usually keys are not referred to as major or minor, though a song may have a major or minor sound to it.
For example, a lot of people refer to a song to be played in “A minor”. Actually that should be a song in “C key”.
If that is what you mean, then yes, the chords are of the same family. You will find in both, chords like F, G, Em, Am, and C, etc.
In the minor song, you will also find E or E7 probably more often than in the major song.
I hope I answered your question. :b