7sus4 Chords on Guitar: The Chord That Sounds Like Resolution and Tension at Once
Learn 7sus4 chords on guitar - what they are, how to play them, and why they create such a powerful sense of suspended motion in jazz, funk, and pop music.
Popular fretboard positions with fingering suggestions
Showing 8 of 84 playable shapes
The D dominant 7th suspended 4th dominant 7th suspended 4th chord replaces the third with a perfect fourth G, creating a suspended, unresolved tension. The combination of the fourth G, fifth A, and minor seventh C generates a powerful, dramatic sound often used in blues, rock, and jazz for dynamic resolutions.
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.
The fourth creates suspension and a sense of pull toward resolution.
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.
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