the three-finger chords as a tripod shape and {“smallUrl”:“https://www. wikihow. com/images/thumb/0/01/Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet1. jpg/v4-460px-Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet1. jpg”,“bigUrl”:"/images/thumb/0/01/Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet1. jpg/aid667017-v4-728px-Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet1. jpg",“smallWidth”:460,“smallHeight”:345,“bigWidth”:728,“bigHeight”:546,“licensing”:"<div class="mw-parser-output">License: <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" class="external text" href="https://creativecommons. org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3. 0/">Creative Commons</a>
\n</p><br />\n</p></div>"} the four-finger chords as a fork. Yes, that is simplified. . . {“smallUrl”:“https://www. wikihow. com/images/thumb/9/9e/Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet2. jpg/v4-460px-Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet2. jpg”,“bigUrl”:"/images/thumb/9/9e/Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet2. jpg/aid667017-v4-728px-Learn-Many-Chords-on-Piano-Using-Two-Shapes-and-the-Numbers-1-to-5-Step-1Bullet2. jpg",“smallWidth”:460,“smallHeight”:345,“bigWidth”:728,“bigHeight”:546,“licensing”:"<div class="mw-parser-output">License: <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" class="external text" href="https://creativecommons. org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3. 0/">Creative Commons</a>
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When you play chords: do not play all the notes at once “clump,” “clump” but play arpeggio (ar-pe-szhe-o; this is also called “broken chords” – as you strike notes rapidly one-by-one, where each note is struck in sequence from lowest to highest (slightly rocking your hand, tilting it, left to right); so it sounds like r-r-ring – not “clunk” or “crash”....