AdvancedDominant 7th

D#7 Chord

The D#7 is a dominant 7th chord that sounds bluesy, tense, and yearning to resolve. Dominant 7th chords are the engine of blues and jazz. Their inherent tension wants to resolve, making them perfect for transitions and turnarounds.

Notes:D#Root (1)GMajor 3rd (3)A#Perfect 5th (5)C#Minor 7th (b7)

Open Position

D#711fr134211

Chord Diagrams

Position — Fret 11

Uses a barre chord technique

D#711fr134211

Barre Shape — Fret 6

Uses a barre chord technique

D#76fr12341

How to Play D#7

Follow these steps for the open position fingering:

Barre technique: Press your index finger flat across all strings at fret 11 to form the barre, then add the remaining fingers on top.
#StringInstructionNote
1Low E (6th string)Fret 11 with your index fingerD#
2A (5th string)Fret 13 with your ring fingerG
3D (4th string)Fret 13 with your pinky fingerA#
4G (3rd string)Fret 12 with your middle fingerC#
5B (2nd string)Fret 11 with your index fingerD#
6High E (1st string)Fret 11 with your index fingerG

= Open string (no fingers needed)

= Muted string (don't play)

= Press your finger down firmly just behind the fret

Notes in D#7

The D#7 chord is built from 4 distinct notes, each serving a harmonic role:

D#
Root (1)
The root — gives the chord its name
G
Major 3rd (3)
The major third — creates the bright sound
A#
Perfect 5th (5)
The fifth — adds power and stability
C#
Minor 7th (b7)
Extended tone — adds richness and color

Other D# Chords

Explore other chord types built on the same root note:

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