How to match simple chords in electronic organ?

The main methods of electronic organ chord matching are as follows:

Single finger chord playing method. Press the white key to display major triad, press the white key and add an adjacent black keys (black keys on the left or black keys on the right) to play a minor chord. Its rhythm and mode (sound type) are selected with the rhythm type button.

Multi-fingered chord playing. Multi-fingered chords are much richer in chord performance than single-fingered chords, and can play more than 30 kinds of chords. Multi-fingered chords can be easily connected and fingered by finger transposition, which is actually more convenient to play and easier to remember. Multi-fingered chords are generally used in playing.

Omit multi-fingered chords. Major and minor chords are not omitted, and a note can be omitted from the seventh chord. After calculation according to the formula, the third sound can be omitted. For example, sol, si, (re) in G7 chords and re in fa can be omitted. Re, #fa, (la) and la in the D7 chord can be omitted.

Chord transformation. In the multi-fingered chord area, any note of the chord can be played eight degrees higher as long as it does not cross the line. In the automatic chord area, no matter how you turn, as long as they are all these sounds, the effect is exactly the same; If it doesn't turn, it's called in-situ chord.

Extended data:

The electronic organ is a keyboard instrument, but it is actually an electronic synthesizer. In fact, the electronic organ is not a correct name at all. Because it looks like a piano, some people call it the electronic organ. Actually, the official name should be electronic synthesizer.

It uses large-scale integrated circuits, and most of them are allocated with sound memory memory (wave table). It is used to store the real sound waveforms of various musical instruments and output them when playing. There are two kinds of electronic organ in common use: arranger keyboard (with automatic accompaniment) and synthesizer (without automatic accompaniment). Electronic pianos in a broad sense include electronic pianos (digital pianos, which are different from electro-acoustic pianos). Most of them use staff notation, and most of them are high and low double-line notation. Sometimes we also use alto spectrum, simple spectrum and guitar spectrum.

References:

Electronic organ/electronic organ