What is A9 chord?
What is A9 chord?
The A9 chord contains the notes A, C#, E, G and B. It is produced by taking the 1 (root), 3, 5, b7 and 9 of the A Major scale. The 9th note of the scale (B) is the same as the 2nd note, but we refer to it as a 9, as this implies that the chord is a dominant 7 chord (1, 3, 5, 7) with a 9 included.
What barre chord is on the 9th fret?
9th fret: F# (Gb) major. 10th fret: G major.
What is an A11 chord?
A 11th chord Explanation: The A eleventh is a six-note chord. To avoid dissonance the third (C#) is normally omitted. The chord is abbreviated as A11. Omissions: A11(no3): A – E – G – B – D; A11(no9): A – C# – E – G – D. Theory: The A eleventh chord is constructed by adding a third to a ninth chord.
What are the most common barre chords?
To play the various major chords, place the bar as follows.
- C – barre the 3rd fret.
- C# – barre the 4th fret.
- D – barre the 5th fret.
- D# – barre the 6th fret.
- E – barre the 7th fret.
- F – barre the 8th fret.
- F# – barre the 9th fret.
- G – barre the 10th fret.
What is an A13 chord?
The A13 chord contains the notes A, C#, E, G and F#. It is produced by taking the 1 (root), 3, 5, b7 and 13 of the A Major scale. It is essentially an A dominant 7 chord with an added 13.
What is f7 chord?
The F#7 (F sharp dominant 7) chord contains the notes F#, A#, C# and E. It is produced by taking the root (1), 3, 5 and b7 of the F# Major scale. It is essentially an F# chord, with an added flat 7. F#7 is most commonly played with the root note on the 2nd fret of the 6th string.
What does an A6 chord look like?
The A6 chord can be built from the major keys of A, D, and E and also from the A major pentatonic scale. It is built with the notes A, C#, E and F# which are the same notes in an F#m7 chord.