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Dylan Freedman edited ChordTheory.tex
about 9 years ago
Commit id: d6d47ff3ea23b69eeaa74c1d3d4aa7c825d2da62
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diff --git a/ChordTheory.tex b/ChordTheory.tex
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The octave of these successive notes can be incremented or decremented freely, and the chord is still considered to have a \textit{major} quality. See figure for a C major chord in root position.
\begin{comment} % Chords feature a \textit{root note} which is the note around which the \textit{quality} is based.
% The lowest note (note with the lowest pitch) within a \textit{root position} chord is called its \textit{root note}.
% A chord typically has a root note, the note with the lowest pitch, and a quality, which describes the arrangement of successive notes' pitches.
\end{comment}