Emin - Open E Minor
What is a Em chord?
A minor chord stacks the root, minor third (3 semitones — one fret lower than the major third) and perfect fifth. That single half-step shift in the third is the entire difference between major (bright, resolved) and minor (dark, melancholy). Minor chords are the natural anchor of minor-key songs and provide emotional contrast in major-key progressions as the vi chord (relative minor).
Notes in the chord: E – G – B
Intervals: Root, b3, 5 (measured from the root)
Where Em fits in a key
Em appears as the iii in C major, ii in D major, and i in E minor.
Common progressions with Em
i-VI-III-VII — in E minor
Em → C → G → D
i-iv-v — in E minor
Em → Am → Bm
i-VII-VI-V — in E minor
Em → D → C → Bm
When to use a minor chord
Minor chords carry sadness, longing, drama and tension across every genre — from Dorian-mode rock (Eleanor Rigby, Wicked Game) to natural minor pop ballads to flamenco and metal. The vi-IV-I-V progression (Am-F-C-G in C major) is one of the most-used emotional progressions in modern pop. Minor chords also act as substitute tonics — vi can stand in for I to weaken the sense of resolution.
Common substitutions for Em
- •Minor 7th — adds the b7 for a smoother, jazz-blues feel
- •Minor 9th — adds tension and color without losing the minor character
- •Diminished — replaces the 5th with a b5 for darker, more unstable tension
- •Sus2 — keeps the open quality but removes the gendered (major/minor) third