
14
Auto Accompaniment
The lowest interval in our root-position trial (between the root and the
third) determines whether the triad is a major or minor chord, and we
can shift the highest note up or down by a semitone to produce two
additional chords, as shown.
The basic characteristics of the chord sound remain intact even if we
change the order of the notes to create different inversions.
Successive chords in a chord progression can be smoothly
connected, for example, by choosing the appropriate inversions.
Reading Chord Names
Chord names tell you just about everything you need to know about a
chord (other than the inversion/voicing). The chord name tells you
what the root of a chord is, whether it is major, minor or diminished,
whether it requires a major or flatted seventh, what alterations or
tension does it use...all at a glance.
The CHORD FINGER mode
The chord Finger mode lets you finger your own chords on the auto
accompaniment section of the keyboard. This keyboard identifies both
multi finger chord and single finger chord. When it cannot identify the
multi keys, it will identify that as single finger chord.
SINGLE FINGER
Single-finger accompaniment makes it simple to produce beautifully
orchestrated accompaniment using major, seventh, minor and minor
seventh chord by pressing a minimum number of keys on the auto
accompaniment section of the keyboard.
MULTI-FINGER
This is the default accompaniment mode. You can use either type of
single fingering or chord fingering in this mode.
Note:
In full range mode, the whole keyboard is chord detect section. It
identifies only multi finger chord.
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