INTERESTING!

Oh I thought (guessed) that a 'C2' was the second inversion of C (!) Which sounds OK over a C2. I thought the second was called a Ninth CEGD sort of thing, and such a chord would be written as C9. Being a sax player learning keyboards, I dont need to stick too close to a chord on sax and don't have to worry (too much) about spacing/voicings.

Its left me wondering about how a second inversion chord is written and how chords are voiced in general in BIAB.It would be so helpful if you could see the vocings written out. As I work with real tracks this is often not possible I think.

The PG site link above, though useful, seems to list but not explain the voicings.

Zero


Win 11 64, Asus Rog Strix z390 mobo, 64 gig RAM, 8700k