I believe you are asking about tab notation. Yes, you can find tab notation for guitar and piano. Tab notation for guitar shows chord names and fingerings. Tab notation for piano is essentially a lyric sheet with the chord names above the words where they are to change.
Check this site out and see if this is what you are asking about:
http://www.911tabs.com/
Musician, composer, teacher.
2007-09-18 09:54:38
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answer #1
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answered by Bearcat 7
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The chords, if written above the music, would be played simultaneously. D5 is a power chord, or at least that's what it's called on guitar, and as for D/G, there ought to be a chord diagram either at the beginning or end of the piece of music, or if you play guitar, you could go out and buy a chord book, or use an online chord book. D/G just means that somebody either used an existing chord, or made a D build G chord, where they used notes from both the D and G scales. Hope this helps. If all else fails, just ask a guitarist over to jam. If he's had any lessons at all, he'll be able to hold a chord that, if not perfect, would at least sit pretty in place of D/G.
2016-03-18 08:00:37
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Sixth notes?? Not sure what you mean.
Now there is certainly sheet music that includes chords, usually in popular music. But if you are talking about note durations (like half notes or "sixth" notes, whatever you are trying to say) -- well they are kind of necessary -- otherwise we have no clue about rhythm. And pitch is kind of important too -- to some of us :-). So we are going to have to indicate what pitches the melody is using -- chord symbols won't tell us that.
A "lead sheet" is a single staff, bare-bones outline of a song. Only the melody is given (with the proper durations, of course) and the chord symbols given above that (what jazz musicians call the "changes").
Does this help?
2007-09-18 05:07:38
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answer #3
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answered by glinzek 6
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Since this is in the Classical music section, I'm guessing you mean for classical music, eh? I'm sure that there are. Try searching for the names of the classical pieces you're looking for in quotes with the word chords or tablature behind it. Should find something.
2007-09-17 22:14:41
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answer #4
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answered by sixstringlass 2
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...I'm sorry, but I don't know what you're talking about. Do YOU know what you're talking about? If so, you'll need to be more specific.
~Scottie
2007-09-18 03:40:01
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answer #5
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answered by Scott T 6
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I tried it on my keyboard...
not possible, unless one is deaf
2007-09-17 22:09:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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