Guide to Chord Formation by Howard Wright (Howard@jmdl.com)
Chapter 3 : Triads
3.0 : Triads
These are the basic
building blocks of
chords. A triad is a group of
3 notes and determines the basic
sound of a chord.
E.g. If the chord is a
minor chord, it will be based on a
minor triad.
If the chord is
major, it will be based on a
major triad.
3.1 : Major and Minor Triads
The major and minor triads are made up from these notes:
1st 3rd 5th
but
remember - use a minor 3
rd for the minor triad, and the major
3
rd for the major triad.
A list of all major and minor triads is given at the end of this
FAQ (
Appendix B). If you want to learn them, it makes life
easier,
but it's easy enough to just count up in semitones from the
root note
to get the notes for any triad you're interested in.
The only difference between a major
chord and a major
triad is
that a chord will usually have more than 3 notes, so you just
double up on some of them. The
root (
1st) is most likely to
be doubled, but you can double up on the 1
st, 3
rd or 5
th,
although you will get
subtly different sounds.
Take
C major for example.
-
C major triad = 1st, major 3rd, 5th = C E G
Everybody knows this chord:
EADGBE
x32010
C
If we look at the notes, we see it has:
(low to high): C E G C E
Which is the same as: 1st 3rd 5th 1st 3rd.
So here the 1st and 3rd have been doubled.
Remember that the root note must always be the
lowest
note of the chord. If you want to have the 3
rd or 5
th
at the bottom of the chord, you have to write it as
C/E or
C/G meaning a
C chord with an
E (or
G)
bass.
See
section 7.0 for more details on X/Y type chords.
3.2 : Suspended Triads
The thing to remember here is that the
3rd has been
replaced
with another note - either the
2nd or the
4th.
So whereas with major and minor triads you have the 3
rd to give
the '
flavour' of the chord (i.e.
major or
minor), with suspended
triads you have no
3rd, so the chord is neither major nor
minor.
A
suspended 4th triad would be: 1
st 4
th 5
th
A
suspended 2nd triad would be: 1
st 2
nd 5
th
As with major and minor chords, you just double up on notes
to go from the
triad to the
chord.
But - you almost
never double the '
suspended' note - you usually
only double the
1st or
5th.
So take
Asus4 as our example.
-
Asus4 triad is: 1st 4th 5th = A D E
The shape is:
EADGBE
x02230
Asus4
The spelling for this is:
(low to high): A E A D E (1st 5th 1st 4th 5th)
So here the 1st and 5th appear twice in the chord, with just one 4th.
So now I've covered major and minor chords, suspended 2
nd and suspended 4
th
chords.
Guide to Chord Formation by Howard Wright
Reformatted and noded (with permission) by Space Butler
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