What is a Bsus2 chord?
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What is a Bsus2 chord?
The B Suspended Second chord is made up of the notes B, C#, and F# Due to the absence of the third, Suspended chords are neither major nor minor.
How do you sus2 a chord?
To make a sus2 chord, the third of a major chord is lowered a whole tone, which is the same as two frets. This produces a chord with the formula root, second and fifth. Asus2 and Dsus2 are easy chords to play, as you release a finger and the sus2 note is found on the open string.
What is B flat sus2?
The Bb sus 2 chord (B flat suspended 2) is produced by taking the 1, 2 and 5 of the Bb Major scale. It contains the notes Bb, C and F. It’s a beautiful chord.
What is a Sus2 chord on guitar?
A chord that’s “suspended” in between A and A minor. By Lana Cooper. The Asus2 (or A suspended 2nd) chord, is easy to play, but has a sound that’s hard to pin down. This is attributed to the fact that a suspended chord can often be used in place of major or minor chords with the same root note.
What is B flat sus?
The Bb sus 4 chord (B flat suspended 4) contains the notes Bb, Eb and F. It is produced by taking the 1 (root), 4 and 5 of the Bb Major scale. It is essentially a Bb Major chord, with the 3rd (D) taken out and the 4th (Eb) added in. By omitting the 3rd and adding the 4th, the chord feels ‘suspended’.
What notes are in C sus2?
Csus2 has the tones: C (1), D (2) und G (5). Cm has the tones: C (1), Eb (m3) and G (5), C has the tones: C (1), E (3) and G (5), Csus4 has the tones: C (1), F (4) and G (5).
Is Csus same as Csus4?
Sus4 (or just sus) stands for „suspended 4th“. The 3rd of a major or a minor chord is suspended and replaced by a perfect 4th.
Is Add9 the same as 9?
Quite simply put: the 9th chord will include a 7 of some form. The add9 chord will only contain the 9 as the extra note in the chord. There are a few different variations off of this, and five of them in total are covered in the animated music theory lesson below.
Are Add9 and add2 the same?
Show activity on this post. I’ll use add2 or add4 to indicate closed voicing (within one octave). Add9 or add11 tend to imply voicings beyond one octave but could be interpreted within an octave. That seems pretty intuitive to anyone without a “purist” theoretical axe to grind.