GM Arts Home Page

Electric Guitar

Making Music

Guitar Chords

MIDI Music

JV/XP Synths

Band Tips

Science

Email GM Arts
Guitar Chords (part one)
Extended Chords (part two)
Chord Variations (part three)
Music Topics Home Page Email GM Arts

Guitar Chords

Understanding of chords is surrounded by more than its share of mystique and hype.   There are many similar and conflicting terms used to describe different chords.   I've used a simple method here that covers just about every chord you'll ever use.

This method makes it easy to work out which notes the songwriter intended.   It is aimed at the guitarist, and explains which notes to play, with chord examples.


Sidenote for those who have written:   Yes, there is more than a passing similarity between this topic, which was on the Web for nearly 3 years at the time an article on chords appeared in the January 1999 edition of 'Guitar One' magazine.   Although my home page does indicate that information here is free, a mention in the references or credits would not have gone astray.

Basics
Chords are based on harmony, using every second note in a dominant scale, starting with the root note.   The dominant scale is the same as the major scale, except the 7th note which is a semitone flatter.   The table below shows the notes of the dominant scale, with examples in the key of C and A.   Every second note in the scale is shown in red:

chord notes
(R is the root note)

Notes in chords are referred to by their note number, so that a single scheme can be used, regardless of the chord's root note, or the key and scale you're using.   In the above examples, the 5th note is G for a C chord, and E for an A chord.

Here's the same notes on a fretboard in the key of A. chord notes

OK - here's the important bit - everything that follows depends on this, so please take time to understand it.

Selecting every 2nd note in the dominant scale gives us:

the root note, the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 11th and 13th

Each of these notes may be:

  • included as-is
  • flattened (1 semitone lower)
  • raised (1 semitone higher)
  • omitted (deliberately or for convenience)

Altered Notes
Generally, a flattened note is shown with either a 'b' symbol, or '-', and a raised note is shown with a '#' or '+'.   So, a flattened 9th would be written b9, or -9, a raised 9th would be shown as #9 or +9.   This article uses the '-' and '+' symbols to minimise confusion between root notes (which may be flats or sharps), and the altered notes.

I'll starting with basic chords, and expand on them later.   Just looking at the first 3 notes used for chords, we have the root note, 3rd and 5th.   Flattening the 3rd gives a minor 3rd (so named because it is the basis for a minor chord).   Raising the 3rd note a semitone gives the same note as the 4th, so it is called the 4th, instead of a sharpened 3rd.   The 5th note can also be flattened or sharpened to give a -5 or +5.

root, 3rd and 5th notes

Triad Chords
Triads have 3 notes.   Here are common triads comprised of the root note, the 3rd (un-altered, flattened or sharpened) and the 5th (also un-altered, flattened or sharpened).

majorroot, 3rd, 5thC major = C, E, GA major = A, C#, E
minorroot, m3, 5thC minor = C, Eb, GA minor = A, C, E
sus 4 (suspended 4th)root, 4th, 5thCsus4 = C, F, GAsus4 = A, D, E
aug or + (augmented 5th)root, 3, +5C+ = C, E, AbA+ = A, C#, F
m-5 (minor flattened 5th*)root, m3, -5Cm-5 = C, Eb, GbAm-5 = A, C, D#

* a m-5 chord is technically a diminished chord, however, most sheet music showing diminished chords include the 6th note also.   See part 2 for this diminished chord.

Here are some triads in the key of A using the root, 3rd and 5th notes.
A Am Asus4 Am-5 A-5 A+5
In case you haven't seen chord diagrams before, the numbers across the top show suggested fingerings for each fretted string.   An "x" means that sting is muted and not played.   I've also shown the interval notes (such as "m3" for minor 3rd, +5 for a sharpened 5th, etc), as well as the chord notes below each diagram.

  This method is my own invention, and is based mostly on existing musical theory.   It makes it easy to interpret written chords, and covers just about every chord in common use.   In fact, there's only a couple of chords it does not cover, and these are shown in part 3.  

If you want to understand the full theory and why it causes so much confusion, see advanced information.   If you want to keep a clear head, and read more about extended chords, go to part 2.


Guitar Chords (part one)
Extended Chords (part two)
Chord Variations (part three)
Music Topics Home Page Email GM Arts