How To Identify Chords
The Professor
Oct 22 2013, 03:09 PM
Theory Instructor
Posts: 888
Joined: 8-January 13
From: Manchester UK
One of the big questions I've been getting lately is about looking at a chord shape or a group of notes and then figuring out what the chord name is from there.

To help with this, here are two steps that I take whenever I have a chord that I can't figure out right away and need to break things down.


Step 1

Write out the notes of the chord in alphabetical order from the lowest note on the guitar as the starting note.

So, if you have the chord x20031, which is B D G D F, you would spell that as:


B D F G


As that is the same notes, but in order from the lowest notes.

If you can't recognize the chord from there, you can take one more step as you can see next.


Step 2


The second step would be to write out the notes in order, but not have any consecutive notes, such as the F and G in the first spelling, B D F G.

If you do that, you get G B D F, which when you look at it is a G7 chord.

So, the original chord would be G7/B, or an inversion of G7 with the 3rd in the bass.


These steps won't solve all your chord identity problems, but they will help you figure out a lot of chords that you are having trouble identifying on the fretboard.


Do you have a chord you haven't been able to name and it's driving you nuts? Post your shapes/notes below and we'll work it out together.

You are at GuitarMasterClass.net


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