Major chord

Chord having a root, a major third, and a perfect fifth From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A major chord is a triad with a major third and a perfect fifth above the root. The major chord above C is spelled C–E–G.

A major triad has a major third on the bottom, a minor third on top, and a perfect fifth between the outer notes.[1]
Quick facts Component intervals from root, Tuning ...
major triad
Component intervals from root
perfect fifth
minor third
major third[1]
Tuning
just - 4:5:6[2]
Forte no.
3-11[3]
Close

Structure

The major chord timbre is sometimes described as brighter than its minor counterpart.[4] The primary intervals in a major chord are the major third between the first and second notes, the perfect fifth between the first and third notes, and the minor third between the second and third notes.[1] It is a tertian chord, because it is built in thirds.[5] When the root of the chord is not in the bass, the chord is considered inverted.[6]

In harmonic analysis and on lead sheets, a major chord is often indicated by the letter of its root.[7] In integer notation, a major triad is {0,4,7}.[8]

Just intonation

The just major triad is composed of three tones in whole number ratios 4:5:6.[9]

In just intonation, a major chord is tuned to the frequency ratio 4:5:6. The scale allows major triads at I, III, IV, V, VI, and VI.[10] In equal temperament, the fifth is two cents narrower than the just perfect fifth. The major third is 14 cents flat of the just value.[11]

See also

References

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