A – Major Chord on Guitar (easy): History, Chord Shapes, Major Scale, Songs in the Key of A

a-major-chord-on-guitar-chord-shapes-major-scale-songs-in-the-key-of-a

Presenting you another article in our “Chord of the Week” series, where we share a new guitar chord every week, exploring its history, its relevance, how it’s played on the guitar, its major scale, some common chord progressions, and a few popular songs in its key.

The A – major chord!

Think of this key as the feeling you get when your darlin’ has to get back on the bus. Sure, you miss your earth angel already, but you know he or she will be back in your world before you know it. Why? Because life is good and somebody up there cares. That’s the emotional quality of much of the music written in the key of A.

a-major-chord-on-guitar-chord-shapes-major-scale-songs-in-the-key-of-aNot quite as popular in classical music history as keys with fewer sharps (like D and G), A Major does have its place. A Major wasn’t so often used in the Romantic Era (it’s the key of Beethoven’s famous 7th Symphony and Mendelssohn’s 4th, but little else), but it was Mozart’s favourite key for clarinets and he stuck to it when wriitng music specifically for this instrument. It’s often found in chamber music (notably for composers Schubert, Dvořák, Brahms, Franck, Fauré) perhaps because it’s considered the simplest key for violins and is reputed to have the fullest sound.

In popular music you naturally find it among bands with an optimist twist but also, ironically, with bluesier performers like Eric Clapton and Adele (its slightly earthy character almost rivals the key of E).

The key of A, with only three accidentals— sharps— is fairly easy to play on the guitar, and it’s an easy key to sing in. emotional connections. Learn everything you need to know about about major scales and how they work.

The A Chord Positions on the Guitar: Three Little Soldiers

It looks simple enough, but playing the basic A Major chord can be a little tough if you’ve got large fingers, as your second, third, and fourth fingers have to crowd close together without touching the other strings.

But if you’re finding that the A chord is tough to play, don’t worry— any chord is playable with practice! Even better, the Uberchord app (click for free download) can reduce the amount of practice needed by listening and providing you real time feedback.

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You can also take comfort in knowing that later on when you find yourself having to play progressions of chords that are hard to switch between, you can program in the progressions themselves and get helpful feedback that helps you improve. Check out the five great tips to help you learn new chords.

Theory and Practise: The Pattern of the A Major Scale Explained

If you’re already music theory literate (if you’re not, here’s a great place to start) you’ll know that the tones in a major key follow this sequence:

whole tone, whole tone, half tone, whole tone, whole tone, whole tone, half-tone

In other words, at the third and the seventh places in the scale there’s a half tone, and at all the other places there are whole tones. All major keys follow this pattern.

This means that the scale of the key of A is made up of the notes A, B, C#, D, E, F#, and G#.

a-major-chord-on-guitar-chord-shapes-major-scale-songs-in-the-key-of-a

Voilà the A major scale, with A at its root and another A, an octave higher, at its pinnacle.

On your guitar strings it looks like this:

a-major-chord-on-guitar-chord-shapes-major-scale-songs-in-the-key-of-a

If you are having difficulties memorising your guitar’s fretboard notes? Here is a secret technique which is used by many pro guitarists around the world to learn the fretboard.

The A Major chord, which forms the root of the A major scale, is made up of the notes A, C#, and E— the first, third, and fifth notes of the key of A. On the guitar, using this basic A chord position, these notes arrive in this order: E, A, E, A, C#, and E.

Feeling baffled? Our blog has a great series of music theory articles to lead you through the labyrinth. Knowing the theory behind the practice of music playing will help you to be a better musician and give you the sense of comfort and clarity that comes with knowing what it all means. Learning music theory on the side is a great complement to using the free Uberchord app!

Common Chord Progressions in the Key of A Major

If you were to use every chord in the key of A Major, the following would be the chords you’d use. You aren’t strictly limited to using only the chords in the same key, but it helps to know them, so here they are:

A major, B minor, C# minor, D Major, E Major, F# Minor, and G# Diminished

Why are the B, C#, and F# chords minor? Because in the major scale the chords at the second, third, and sixth positions of the key are minor. They just are.

Why is the G# a diminished chord? Because in the key of A it sits in the seventh place, and in major keys, all seventh place chords are diminished.

For variety and greater expressiveness, the E chord can also be played as an E7. Why? Because it sits at the fifth position of the key of A, giving it the honour of being the chord that announces that a musical phrase is about to end. (Run through some of the chord progressions below and you’ll see what we mean.)

Adding the seventh note of the key of E (D) to the E chord, creating a E7, makes the E sound a little more topheavy, as if it’s about to fall over onto the root chord (A) that usually comes next in the chord progression, or, in cases where no chord comes next, giving the musical phrase an unresolved, “dangling” kind of sound.

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“Hello Mary Lou,” as sung by Creedence Clearwater Revival

Here is out previous post on understanding and playing 7th chords and if you want to go more deeply into chord progressions, don’t miss series on learning and understanding music theory.

After your Uberchord lessons you can take a little time to experiment with the following progressions to get a feel for how the chords create a sense of beginning, rising, falling, and ending, depending on their context.

So let’s have another look at the chords in the key of A: A major, B minor, C# minor, D Major, E Major, F# Minor, and G# Diminished.

Obviously you can’t just start playing all these chords and expect to make celestial-sounding music. The following are a few common chord progressions in this key. Most of the songs you hear are made up of combinations of these and other chord progressions. As you play them and get used to their sound, you’ll hopefully realise that you’ve heard these progressions before in many different songs.

  1. A, D, E, A.
  2. A, E, F# minor, D.
  3. A, F# minor, D, E.
  4. A, E, F# minor, C# minor, D, A, D, E.
  5. A, A, A, A, D, D, A, A, E, E, A, A. (blues)
  6. B minor, D, E.
  7. A, D, E, D.
  8. E, D, A.
  9. F# minor, D, A, E.
  10. F# minor, E, F# minor, E.

A Few Great Songs in the Key of A

Have you noticed yet that each key— and even each chord— that you play has its own particular emotional character? Not everyone is capable of picking up on this, but if you do notice it, consider yourself one of the lucky ones who can respond to music’s more subtle nuances!

The key of A, for example, is so resiliently joyful it can handle life lessons like Pearl Jam’s “Alive.”

It can be the acoustic anthem, as Oasis’s “Wonderwall”

It can be a hymn to lighthearted pleasure like Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky.”

It can be a sad and tender longing laced with hope, such as Eric Clapton’s “Tears in Heaven.”

For a sense of transcendent, in-spite-of-it-all joy, you just can’t beat A major. Make it your friend—you won’t be sorry.

And if you haven’t downloaded the Uberchord app yet, here are five great reasons why you should! Not only will you get instant feedback on your fingerings and chord changes, but here on our blog there are loads of free lessons to enjoy. A few of our latest lessons include common blues chord progressions, pompeii guitar chords, and a discussion of guitar rig vs amplitube

References:

Cosmic Music: Musical Keys to the Interpretation of Reality, essays by Marius Schneider, Rudolf Haase, and Hans Erhard Lauer

Mark Anson-Cartwright (2000). “Chromatic Features of E♭-Major Works of the Classical Period”. Music Theory Spectrum 22 (2): 178

Peter Cropper “Beethoven’s Violin Sonata in A major, Op.47 ‘Kreutzer’: First Movement” The Strad March 2009, p. 64

Rita Steblin (1996) A History of Key Characteristics in the Eighteenth and Early

Nineteenth Centuries, University of Rochester Press, p. 123

  1. D. Mar (1981). Anatomy of the Orchestra, University of California Press, p. 349

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The 10 Most Used Chord Progressions in Pop and Rock and Roll

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