Hey Daevren,
Thanks for your fast response!
I must confess ignorince. I didn't know there was a difference between "regular" chords and guitar chords. Could you expand on this?
Its the same notes! The chords guitarists play are limited because there are only a few shapes that can be played confortable. Of course, the better the player is the more strange chords he could reach. I don't know if you know any guitarists, probably not, but Allan Holdsworth is a guitarist that can play chords that seem physically impossible.
But a C chord on guitar is C E G, on piano too. And an Em chord on guitar is Em G B, on piano too. That was my point. Of course you are going to voice them differently. The piano has more possibilities.
I am familier with inversions, but I am not clear on how this applies to the bass note.
Having a nice, non-disjuncted melody in the bass is important. Same with the highest notes, you could call it soprano(or descant voice).
If you play octaves in your left hand constantly, you will leap from root to root. Its ok, but not the best thing to do. Or have your notes move all parallel. Not bad in pop music, but its the worst thing to voice lead in classical music.
That's an intriguing idea. Any ideas for what I could do with my left hand? (besides picking my nose
)
This is a jazz idea. In jazz you have alot of big chords with 4 or 5 notes. Then you obviously split the tasks to create one big nice sounding chord together. Three people independently trying to play the same chord at the same time is a stupid idea.
If the chord is a triad, ie a three note chord, then you will have no problems with playing the complete chord. But if you play 7th chords you have to think about this.
What does your left hand do? Play the 3rd, 5th and 7th. Its actually stacking a triad on a bass note. If its just triads then playing all three notes is good.
Another technique often used in jazz for playing 7th chords is exchanging the 3rd and the 7th. So bassist plays the roots, guitarist plays small 3 5 7 chords on 3 strings. And you only play 3 and 7. Yes two notes

for this example. So with your left hand you play the 3rd and with the right hand the 7th. Then the next chord you play the 7th in the left and the third in the right. Most of the times these notes will be very close together.
Famous example: Am7-Dm7-G7-Cmaj7. So left hand(starts with the 7th), G F F E. Right hand(starts with the 3rd): C C B B.
This example is for 7th chords only. So jazz music.
Lets do the same example with triad chords: If you have octaves in the left hand then you will have A D G C. That can be smoother, lots of leaps. Lets use an first inversion of Dm. A F G C. Much better.
The F-D interval, in the left hand of teh Dm chord isn't going to be that nice. You may want to forget about the note played by the left hand tumb altogether. And play a very simple 1-3-5 with the right hand on top of those notes. You can have alot of space between the lowest note and the next to lowest note.
But how many notes you want to play really depends on how many other people are in the band playing those chords with you. I am not a christian and rock/gospel bands in churches is an US thing anyway but I can imagine the band can be pretty big. If so you might want to be kind of conservative with the number of notes. Less might be more.
I like that idea. I have lots of CD's (like the WOW Hits series), but the keyboard is not emphasized in them. Should I just try to listen closer, or is there a better plan? I am not against spending money if there is a resource that would be truly helpful.
WOW Hits series? It kind of depends. In rock, keyboards aren't used for chords that much, mainly melodies and melody harmonisations. Then there is jazz music, which has alot more complex things than you are interested in and piano solo's(not bad, obviously, but when they solo they can't play chords, well not with two hands). But jazz has alot of piano chord accompany stuff. Then there is also (jazz/rock) fusion. Sometimes keyboards, sometimes piano, electric organ and they play together with all kinds of instruments. You will have to search for stuff yourself, I am afraid. I don't know stunning examples, but I do know stunning music
I kind of touched on a similar topic in this thread:
https://www.pianoforum.net/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?board=perf;action=display;num=1095228195Also remember I am no expert on this. I don't play piano in these settings. I do seem to know alot more than most people here. I figured I could kind of help you classical people in the right direction.
BTW, if you lack general music theory I covered/used. Point it out, and if I have time I can explain it from the bottem op. Or give you a link.