C# Minor 7th Chord
Jazz-blues, smoky lounge sound
C#m7 is most commonly played as a movable barre chord — the easiest shape sits at fret 4 (C#m7 Barre).
C#min7 - C#m7 Barre
What is a C#m7 chord?
A minor 7th adds the flat 7 to a minor triad — root, minor 3rd, perfect 5th and minor 7th. The added b7 softens the dark minor color into something more reflective and jazzy. Minor 7ths are the smoothest, most universally pleasant chord in the seventh family — they sit comfortably as the ii chord in major keys and the i in minor keys.
Notes in the chord: C# – E – G# – B
Intervals: Root, b3, 5, b7 (measured from the root)
Where C#m7 fits in a key
C#m7 appears as the i in C# minor, vi in E major, and iii in A major.
Common progressions with C#m7
i-VI-III-VII — in C# minor
C#m → A → E → B
i-iv-v — in C# minor
C#m → F#m → G#m
i-VII-VI-V — in C# minor
C#m → B → A → G#m
When to use a minor 7th chord
C#m7 is the home (i) chord of C# minor and the relative minor (vi) of E major. Minor 7ths are the ii in every major-key ii-V-I jazz turnaround (Dm7 → G7 → Cmaj7 in C major). They're also the iii and the vi in major keys, the i in minor keys, and the centerpiece of countless soul, R&B and neo-soul progressions. Substitute a plain minor with m7 anywhere you want a smoother, less-anxious minor feel.
Common substitutions for C#m7
- •Minor 9 — extends with the 9th for a richer neo-soul color
- •Minor 11 — adds the 11th for full jazz-fusion voicings
- •Plain minor — drop the 7th for a more grounded feel
- •Minor add9 — for a brighter, more open minor sound
C# Minor Pentatonic
Classic minor chord scale
Dorian Mode
Jazzy minor sound
Improvisation Basics
Learn to solo over progressions
Practice with Improvisio
Use C#m7 in a progression and see which scales work best.
Try it in the trainer