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Introduction to Spelling Chords

By: Dennis St. Germain
In this music lesson I want to show you how to spell chords and understand the component parts of a chord. You don’t have to even read music to learn to spell chords. All you need to know is the first seven letters of the alphabet. In music, chords are classified according to the interval between their tones. This lesson is applicable to all instruments.

circle of fifths

Figure 1 the circle of fifths

Figure 1 is the circle of Fifths.  Become familiar with this Circle it will be useful throughout your musical life. The numbers near the keynote names represent the number of sharps or flats within that key. If you divide the circle in half down the middle, the right side is the sharp side and the left side is for flats. There are 2 keys at 6 o’clock or F# or Gb and also Db or C# these keys are called enharmonic or they share the same number of flats and/or sharps for example F# has 6 sharps and Gb has 6 flats etc. They also sound the same but have a different name.

The order of flats and sharps


The next thing to remember is the order of sharps and flats. Remembering the order of flats first is easier because it spells the word BEAD then add GCF at the end like this: BEADGCF (I’ll leave it up to you to create some way of remembering this). Then the order of sharps is an EXACT mirror image of the order of flats. Like this: FCGDAEB
I’ll put the together to make some kind of chart.


BEADGCF (the order of flats)
FCGDAEB (the order of sharps)

Are you with me so far? Let’s take it a step further. For example purposes, I will use just the G Major scale for now. Suppose you want to know how many sharps are in the key of G MAJOR. The first thing I would do is go to the circle of fifths and find G, we can see that G is at 1 o’clock (or has one sharp since it’s on the sharp side of the circle). Now count on the order of sharps chart one letter (F) therefore, we have one sharp in the key of G Major and F is sharped in the key of G Major.
Let’s write out the letter names starting on G to the next highest G.
G A B C D E F G
Number the letter names
G A B C D E F# G
1  2  3 4 5  6  7   8
Don’t forget to sharp the F to make the Key of G Major.
All chords are built from its parent major scale and measured from the ROOT.
Here is what you need to know about chord extensions.
Extensions are merely the same scale notes added to a 3 or 4 note chord to change its sound but not its type. If we take the G major scale for example and write it out for 2 octaves i.e.

G A B C D E F# G A  B  C   D   E   F#  G
1  2  3  4  5 6  7   1  2  3  4    5    6   7     8
8  9 10 11 12 13 14   15

We notice that the 9th is the the same as the 2nd step of a scale the 11th is the 4th step of a scale and the 13th is the 6th step of a scale added to the basic chords. You can also sharp (#) or flat (b) each of the extension notes to create even more sounds.

Armed with this knowledge, you can now build chords using the following formula:

Major 7 chords 1-3-5-7Let’s take our G Major Scale and build a G Maj. 7 chord. Take the first, third, fifth and seventh notes and extract them from the scale. You now have the notes G B D F# which forms the G major 7th Chord.
minor 7 chords 1-b3-5-b7For minor chords we now have to do some altering. Extract the 1 3 5 7 from the G Major scale then flat the 3rd and the 7th scale tones. You now have the notes G Bb D F which forms the G minor 7th Chord.
Diminished 7 chords 1-b3-b5-bb7 or 6 (bb7 means double flat the 7th or it is actually the 6th scale step)For diminished chords, extract the 1 3 5 7 from the Major scale then flat the 3rd and the 5th and double flat the 7th (or you can use the 6th tone) so for G dim. 7 We have G Bb Db E
Dominant 7th chord 1-3-5-b7The dominant 7th group is one of the most colorful of the chord groups and many musicians like to add extensions and altered scale tones to this group. Let’s extract the 1 3 5 7 tones from the G Major scale then flat the 7th step of the scale. We now have a G7 chord with the notes G B D F as the component parts of that chord.

Augmented chords 1-3-#5 Augmented chords also have a very unique sound to them having the raised 5th scale tone. Again let’s extract just the 1 3 5 scale tones (G B D) and sharp the 5th tone (D#) and there you have it a G aug. chord.
Recap
Always measure your chords from its parent major scale. If you want to find the spelling of Bb7 then write out a Bb scale in letter names, number each letter then follow the formula for Dominant 7th chords i.e. 1 – 3 -5 – b7 so for example we would have the spelling of Bb7th as Bb D F Ab.

Voicings are merely all the component parts of a chord arranged in some other order like, 3157 or 151351 or virtually any combination you can conjure up. You can double some of the notes you can add extra notes really the sky is the limit.

The steps to greater knowledge come with application. Take all the keys in circle of fifths and work them out in all keys. Use a piece of paper and write them out like we did. You will start to have a huge vocabulary of chord knowledge and eventually, you want to commit this to memory. Remember when you were trying to spell words well now you have the tools to spell chords.


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9 Responses to “Introduction to Spelling chords”

  1. 1
    RYErnest Says:

    Nice post u have here :D Added to my RSS reader

  2. 2
    Norbert C. Piano Says:

    This is a good theory for us trying to learn music at home. I’ll bookmark this one. Through this post, we will be able to understand how unique chords were named. By the way, does anybody know how chords with slashes are done? eg. F#/D, C#/A?

  3. 3
    Dennis St Germain Says:

    As far as chords with slashes are concerned pretty much the sky is the limit. It is another way of spelling a chord for example a G chord with a slash “A” means that you can actually spell the chord with the reference of A as the ROOT. The notes found in that chord would be (from low to high in root position) A,G,B,D In the key of A (3 sharps F#-C#-G#) you would have a dominant seventh type of chord with -A the ROOT- -G the flat 7- – B the ninth- – and D the 11th. So I would spell the chord symbol as A11 add9 or we can spell it as G/A . Pretty cool hey!

    This concept I cal Harmonic Plurality meaning that one chord can be many different chords depending on which note is the root.

    To take one of your examples F#/D if D is the ROOT then we would have the notes D F# A# C# which could be a DMaj.7 add b9 that would have to resolve somewhere as it would not sound too good as a single stand alone chord although if you flatted the A# to A natural you would have a straight D Major7 chord. Try experimenting with chords as I find them fascinating especially weird chord changes like those of composer Wayne Shorter.

  4. 4
    Norbert C. Piano Says:

    Hi Dennis, thanks for the education. I really learned a lot as a musician from your website. Does this also apply to piano? I play the guitar and I’m a beginner for piano. I think learning the piano will be easier because of the chord theory. I really have much to learn in music. Anyways I will be reading your posts here and will be waiting for new posts. P.S Your band website is great and so is the music.

  5. 5
    Dennis St Germain Says:

    All of the stuff I talk about will apply to piano. If you have more experience on the guitar and less on the piano then I would stick to guitar. I’m coming out with a simple method or tutorial video that explains about chords and chord voicings and how to construct them on guitar and how to realize the relationship between the melody note and the chord symbol asked for in the music. This will help guitar players get out of ruts like putting your finger here and there and viola! you have a D minor 7 without any regard to the sound and the relationship of the type of chord and the top note of the chord. I will also have an e-book which will have voicings and diagrams listed ($5.00) available as well if you are seriously wanting to know about fingerboard harmony.

    I will be posting it here on my blog and it will be a free lesson similar to the “learn the note names on guitar” that I posted on You Tube and also posted here on my blog.
    Keep checking back and if you register for the blog you will be sent notification.

    Peace

  6. 6
    Juillinsild Says:

    Other variant is possible also

  7. 7
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  8. 8
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  9. 9
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