The Major chord|
Formula:
| 1 3 5 |
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Common Abbreviations:
| M, Ma, Maj |
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Most popular root:
| G, D, C, A, E |
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Popularity:
| 38 |
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Top Users:
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Common Styles:
| Blues, Country, Folk, Jazz, Reggae |
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 Some Major chord examples. | Description: The major chord is a triad (a three-note chord). From the root you go up a major third, and then a minor third up to the fifth. I is the major third up from the root that makes it a major chord. The chord has the notes - counted from the root - 1 - 3 - 5. In C-major that is C - E - G. The chord might be inverted, meaning that we change the order of the notes. In first inversion we play the notes 3 - 5 - 1, or E - G - C if we stick to C-major. The second inversion is 5 - 1 - 3, or G - C - E in C-major.
Description courtesy of
http://www.torvund.net/guitar/chords/Major.asp | Songs using Major chord: (NB Common types such as Maj, m, 7 will generate longs lists)
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