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Hoots : Chord Practice Right Hand I am seeking a chart or music notation of all common chords with the melody note on top. Say the melody note is C. What are all the chords with C on top. An example would be Cm- EbGC C-EGC Am - freshhoot.com

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Chord Practice Right Hand
I am seeking a chart or music notation of all
common chords with the melody note on top.

Say the melody note is C. What are all the chords with C on top. An example would be Cm- EbGC
C-EGC Am EAC, F FAC. Then repeat for all 12
keys incline common chords I have left out.

When playing from a lead sheet you play the melody note with the pinky. Then you must immediately play the correct inversion etc.

A good drill would include all chords the the same note on top. By playing the drill it would reinforce learning the correct inversions, chords.


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For playing melody and chords with the right hand, instead of "memorizing" all inversions, I think it's better to just combine the melody note and add chord notes below it, until the needed notes are covered and/or you run out of fingers. It is a quite mechanical thing to do, but a big list of chord diagrams isn't going to help. You should rather be able to reconstruct inversions on the fly.

You see, the piano keyboard is full of C major. "Inversions" are only narrow windows into the infinite array of chord notes, like this:

When playing melody and chords with your right hand, you slide the window (red rectangle) in the above picture so that its right-hand side is at or as close to the melody note as possible.

If you want exercises, here are some:

Take a chord, for example C major, and play all of its inversions from lowest to highest, like what the animation above shows. Then do the same in reverse order.
Take a song and its chord progression, keep the right-hand's pinky finger at or close to some fixed key like C, and play the chord progressions with the rest of the right-hand fingers.
Take a song and its chord progression, and accompany the song using different inversions in sequence like this:


Even though the inversions just go up and down quite mechanically, it starts to resemble a melody, don't you think?


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