Casio PX410R Musical Instrument User Manual


 
E-33
FINGERED
FINGERED provides you with a total of 15 different chord
types. The following describes the FINGERED
accompaniment keyboard and melody keyboard, and
tells you how to play a C-root chord using FINGERED.
FINGERED Accompaniment Keyboard and Melody
Keyboard
NOTE
The accompaniment keyboard can be used for playing
chords only. No sound will be produced if you try playing
single melody notes on the accompaniment keyboard.
See the separate
Appendix
D for details on playing chords
with other roots.
*1: Inverted fingerings cannot be used. The lowest note is
the root.
*2: The same chord can be played without pressing the 5th G.
NOTE
Except for the chords specified in note*
1
above, inverted
fingerings (i.e. playing E-G-C or G-C-E instead of C-E-
G) will produce the same chords as the standard
fingering.
Except for the exception specified in note*
2
above, all
of the keys that make up a chord must be pressed.
Failure to press even a single key will not play the desired
FINGERED chord.
FULL RANGE CHORD
This accompaniment method provides a total of 38 different
chord types: the 15 chord types available with FINGERED
plus 23 additional types. The digital piano interprets any
input of three or more keys that matches a FULL RANGE
CHORD pattern to be a chord. Any other input (that is not a
FULL RANGE CHORD pattern) is interpreted as melody play.
Because of this, there is no need for a separate accompaniment
keyboard, so the entire keyboard, from end to end, functions
as a melody keyboard that can be used for both melody and
chords.
FULL RANGE CHORD Accompaniment Keyboard and
Melody Keyboard
Auto Accompaniment
Accompaniment
keyboard
Melody keyboard
C
Caug
*1
Cm7
*2
C7
5 *1
Cmadd9
*2
Cm
Csus4
Cmaj7
*2
C7sus4
CmM7
*2
Cdim
C7
*2
Cm7
5
Cadd9
*2
Cdim7
*1
Accompaniment keyboard/Melody keyboard