![]() ![]() Instead of playing them all at once like we would with a chord, we play them individually: So an arpeggio is a chord played like a scale. Like a chord, it is made up of only certain notes from that set. Like a scale, an arpeggio is linear: it's a set of notes that you play one at a time either in order or otherwise. This is the best way of really learning and knowing a key, and you should try and play short pieces, even if it is just the melody, in this new key.įurther information on key signatures, how to create chords and so on can be found in our guides.Some people will argue with me and say that an arpeggio is more like a scale than a chord because it is a linear set of notes and not a simultaneous "tone cluster." True, but who cares? It's still a broken up chord.
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