How to build chords – Beginner to pro
Understanding how to build chords is one of the most important things you can learn as a songwriter or beat maker. Chords are when multiple notes are played at the same time. The emotional foundation chords provide is what gives a song its vibe. Don’t worry if you’re unfamiliar with music theory — These are the tricks to make chord building easy as 1-2-3!
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Intervals
An interval is the distance between two notes and chords are usually built by stacking notes at different intervals. You can count the intervals up and down the keyboard in steps known as semitones.
The confusing part is that the name of an interval can be a different number from the number of semitones, this is because it’s based on the scale position. For instance, a major third is on the third position on a major scale. In this guide, intervals will be broken up into smaller intervals, so all you need to remember are these intervals:
- Major second = 2 semitones
- Minor third = 3 semitones
- Major third = 4 semitones
- Perfect fourth = 5 semitones
By stacking these intervals, you can create almost any chord. The starting note is typically called the root, this note will also give the chord its name. For instance, a chord starting on note C will be a C-chord. The following notes will determine if it’s a C major, C minor, C diminished, etc.
Any other intervals mentioned in this guide, such as perfect fifth, minor seventh, major seventh, and major ninth, will be in referring to the different notes of the chords in relation to the root, but you don’t have to remember the total number of semitones.
Basic chords
The most common chord types are major and minor chords. These are both triads, which means they have three notes each and are built with intervals of thirds (3 or 4 semitones). The lowest and highest notes stay the same for both major and minor chords but the middle note is different by 1 semitone.
Two other triads, that are less common because of their dissonance, are diminished and augmented chords. You can ignore these two chord types as a beginner unless you’re feeling adventurous.
Major chords [Beginner]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Major third: count up 4 semitones
- 3Perfect fifth: count up 3 semitones
Major chords sound happy.
- C major
Minor chords [Beginner]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Minor third: count up 3 semitones
- 3Perfect fifth: count up 4 semitones
Minor chords sound sad.
- C minor
Diminished chords [Intermediate]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Minor third: count up 3 semitones
- 3Diminished fifth: count up 3 semitones
Diminished chords sound scary. A diminished fifth means the fifth is lowered by 1 semitone.
- C diminished
Augmented chords [Pro]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Major third: count up 4 semitones
- 3Augmented fifth: count up 4 semitones
Augmented chords sound mysterious. An augmented fifth means the fifth is raised by 1 semitone.
- C augmented
Chord sets
There is a simple trick to get seven triad chords that work great together. First, you need to select a major or minor key. Major and minor keys have seven-note scales, and all notes form the foundation of a chord each. For example, in the key of C major, we have the notes C, D, E, F, G, A, and B (all the white notes.)
- 1Root: start on any scale note
- 2Second: skip
- 3Third: add to the chord
- 4Fourth: skip
- 5Fifth: add to the chord
If you do this with every scale note, you automatically get all the chords of the key. In C major, the chords would be C major, D minor, E minor, F major, G major, A minor, and B diminished (C, Dm, Em, F, G, Am, and Bdim for short.)
- Triad chords
Chord chart
Use this chord chart to see all chords in every major and minor key. To the left, you can see the major keys. To the right, you can see the relative minor keys. The relative minor key shares all notes and chords with the major key but the note and chord that feels like “home” is different. For instance, A minor is the relative minor key of C major. So they both have the exact same notes and chords.
Up top, you can see the roman numerals of each chord in each key. Major chords are written in uppercase numerals, minor chords are written in lowercase numerals, and diminished chords are written in lowercase numerals with a circle at the end. These roman numerals are for understanding the function of the chords within the key. For example, the I-chord (1) is the chord that feels like “home”. Chord function becomes more important when analyzing chord progressions.
Colorful chords
Normal major and minor triad chords are all you need for most endeavors, but sometimes you might want more color and complexity. For these times, chords like suspended, seventh, and ninth chords could be the way to go.
Suspended chords
Suspended chords are when you take regular major or minor chords and “suspend” the third. This means switching out the third for a fourth or a second. Instead of using major and minor third intervals, you’d be using major second (2 semitones) and perfect fourth (5 semitones) intervals. Suspended chords add tension with an open quality.
Suspended fourth [Intermediate]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Perfect fourth: count up 5 semitones
- 3Perfect fifth: count up 2 semitones
- Csus4
Suspended second [Intermediate]
- 1Root: start on any note
- 2Major second: count up 2 semitones
- 3Perfect fifth: count up 5 semitones