F diminished 7, B diminished 7, D diminished 7, and G# diminished 7 will all have these same four notes.
F diminished ( Fdim )
It's actually an F whole diminished 7th chord. It would be an F diminished chord if there were no 'd' in the cord. Also, the correct way to spell the chord would actually be like this:
F-Ab (not G#)-Cb (not B)-Ebb (not D).
All the pitches are correct, just not their names. Any F triad with any kind of 7th attached will be some alteration of the notes F-A-C-E. This is how people quickly identify chords based on the root.
Hope that helps! just thought that would improve the answer a little bit.
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ANSWER:
G#dim7
The actual name of the chord is situational, depending on the key of the piece and the chord's function. What you're describing could be some form of F7 chord with the Eb spelled as D# and omitting the C.
If this is the case then the D# will resolve up to E. If this chord doesn't do this then it is some other flavor ofsimultaneity.
Of course, it could just be a simple Faugmentedchord, too.
- Introduction: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x + 6x in the Lyrics - Chorus: - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| (Instrumental) - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| -Back to Lyrics chords: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x -Back to Chorus: F# (F Sharp Major this time) G#m (G Sharp MINOR This Time) |2'nd Cord| B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| F# (F Sharp Major) (Back to F Sharp Major) Repeat 4x this time - BRIDGE: C# (C Sharp Major) / (Very QUICK switch from "C sharp major to D#m (D Sharp Minor which is the 2'nd chord) (Hold that note for a little longer as the song goes) (Then switch to "F#m" F Sharp "Major" then quickly go to: "G# (G Sharp Major) |then hold that note|. B (B Flat Major) |then hold that note as well| Then Back to the original chord to hold again: Which is: "D#m (D Sharp Minor) - Back to Instrumental: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x - Back to Chorus: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x this time! I hope this helps! Thanks! -Patrick! (ZitranzaTLK) Keyboardist/ Musician!
Normally, a G augmented chord would be G, B, and D-sharp. Augmented mean the top note is raised one half step.
Respell the G-sharp as A-flat, then it's an F minor chord. If the C is on bottom, then it's Fm/C.
There are many forms of G sharp chords, each containing different notes. In modern "chord symbols", "G#" means "G# major". It contains the notes G#, B# and D#. Note: In modern tuning, B# is enharmonically equivalent to C (the same piano key is used). The G# minor chord contains the notes G#, B and D#.
In a c sharp major: C#, E#, G# In a c sharp minor: C#, E, G#
- Introduction: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x + 6x in the Lyrics - Chorus: - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| (Instrumental) - Back to: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| -Back to Lyrics chords: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x -Back to Chorus: F# (F Sharp Major this time) G#m (G Sharp MINOR This Time) |2'nd Cord| B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| F# (F Sharp Major) (Back to F Sharp Major) Repeat 4x this time - BRIDGE: C# (C Sharp Major) / (Very QUICK switch from "C sharp major to D#m (D Sharp Minor which is the 2'nd chord) (Hold that note for a little longer as the song goes) (Then switch to "F#m" F Sharp "Major" then quickly go to: "G# (G Sharp Major) |then hold that note|. B (B Flat Major) |then hold that note as well| Then Back to the original chord to hold again: Which is: "D#m (D Sharp Minor) - Back to Instrumental: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 2x - Back to Chorus: D#m (D Sharp Minor) |The Original Chord| / G# (G Sharp Major) |2'nd Chord| / B (B Flat Major) |3'rd Chord| / D#m (D Sharp Minor) |THEN BACK to the "Original Chord"| Repeat 4x this time! I hope this helps! Thanks! -Patrick! (ZitranzaTLK) Keyboardist/ Musician!
Normally, a G augmented chord would be G, B, and D-sharp. Augmented mean the top note is raised one half step.
Respell the G-sharp as A-flat, then it's an F minor chord. If the C is on bottom, then it's Fm/C.
There are many forms of G sharp chords, each containing different notes. In modern "chord symbols", "G#" means "G# major". It contains the notes G#, B# and D#. Note: In modern tuning, B# is enharmonically equivalent to C (the same piano key is used). The G# minor chord contains the notes G#, B and D#.
In a c sharp major: C#, E#, G# In a c sharp minor: C#, E, G#
D, E, F sharp, and G sharp
C Major chord = C E G
It's just like a C7 chord only every note is raised by one semi-tone, making the notes:C#, E#, G#, B
Presuming you mean an f# chord: a 1 e 2 c 1 g 3
"G" Minor is an open "G" chord-THe same as the "A" Minor chord.
Play the G chord on the guitar.
Yes.. The (I)=1 Chord. The (IV)=4 Chord. & The (V)=5 Chord.ex. In The Key Of G.{ G Chord, C7 Or (C9) Chord, D7 (D9) Chord.