Interactive Manual: Chords, Intervals & Emotions

Chord Basics

A chord is a group of notes played together. The lowest note is usually the root. The root defines the name of the chord (for example, C is the root of a C major chord).

From the root, we build chords by counting steps called intervals.

Example: C major = C (root), E (a major third above), G (a perfect fifth above)

Intervals

An interval is the distance between two notes. We count using half-steps (semitones). One semitone is the smallest step on a piano, moving from one key to the very next.

If the root is C: Minor 3rd = E♭, Major 3rd = E, Perfect 5th = G

Chord Formulas

We use formulas to build chords from intervals. Numbers mean semitone distances:

C minor = C, E♭, G

Sharps and Flats

A flat (♭) means the note is shifted one semitone down. A sharp (♯) means the note is shifted one semitone up.

A double flat (♭♭) means the note is shifted two semitones down.

Example: E♭ = one step lower than E. G♯ = one step higher than G.

Chord Types Beyond Basics

Chord Emotions

Different chords carry different moods. Here are common associations:

Tip: Add flats for sadness and tension. Add sharps for surreal or dreamy effects.