How to Read Guitar Chord Diagrams
Learn how to read guitar chord diagrams quickly. Understand dots, numbers, Xs, Os, and finger positions so you can play any chord chart at sight.
Popular fretboard positions with fingering suggestions
Showing 6 of 6 playable shapes
The A♯ minor 7th flat 9th minor 7th flat 9th chord extends the minor 7th with a flat ninth B, creating a dark, eerie tension. The combination of the minor third C♯, minor seventh G♯, and flat ninth B produces a dissonant, haunting sound perfect for jazz, film scoring, and dramatic resolutions. With C♯ in the bass, this voicing functions as the 1st inversion of A♯ minor 7th flat 9th.
Each note below shows how the chord is built from its root. This is the theory layer underneath the fretboard shapes.
The root anchors the chord and defines its tonal center.
This note supplies the minor color and gives the chord its darker emotional pull.
The fifth reinforces stability and gives the chord its strong harmonic frame.
The minor seventh adds bluesy or jazzy tension that wants to move onward.
The flat ninth adds sharper tension and a more dramatic clash.
Articles that reference this chord and explain how to use it in your playing.
Learn how to read guitar chord diagrams quickly. Understand dots, numbers, Xs, Os, and finger positions so you can play any chord chart at sight.
Learn chord construction step-by-step: intervals, triads, sevenths, and extensions. Build any chord from theory to fretboard.
Learn chord inversions on guitar to create smoother transitions, richer voicings, and more professional-sounding arrangements. Includes shapes and exercises.
Understand the difference between major and minor chords on guitar. Learn the theory, hear the contrast, and practice switching between happy and sad sounds.