D# Major Chord

    Bright and happy sound

    D#GA#

    D# is most commonly played as a movable barre chord — the easiest shape sits at fret 6 (Eb Major Barre (A shape)).

    D#maj - Eb Major Barre (A shape)

    Position 1 of 6
    D#maj
    Eb Major Barre (A shape)
    45678D#A#D#GA#EBGDAE123456
    D#maj
    D-shape (4th fret)
    23456EA#D#GEBGDAE123456
    D#maj
    D# (6th fret)
    45678A#D#A#D#GA#EBGDAE123456
    D#maj
    C-shape (8th fret)
    678910D#G#D#G#CEBGDAE123456
    D#maj
    E-shape (11th fret)
    910111213D#A#D#GA#D#EBGDAE123456
    D#maj
    A-shape (6th fret)
    45678G#D#A#D#GA#EBGDAE123456

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    What is a D# chord?

    A major chord stacks the root, major third (4 semitones above the root) and perfect fifth (7 semitones). The major third is what gives the chord its bright, resolved quality — drop it a half step and you have a minor chord with a darker mood. Major chords are the harmonic anchor of most Western music: songs in major keys typically open and close on their tonic major chord, and the I-IV-V trio of major chords drives countless rock, country, folk and pop songs.

    Notes in the chord: D# – G – A#

    Intervals: Root, 3, 5 (measured from the root)

    Where D# fits in a key

    D# appears as the I in D# major, V in G# major, and IV in A# major.

    Common progressions with D#

    I-V-vi-IV — in D# major

    D# → A# → Cm → G#

    I-IV-V — in D# major

    D# → G# → A#

    I-vi-IV-V — in D# major

    D# → Cm → G# → A#

    When to use a major chord

    In the key of D# major, D# is the tonic (I) — the chord progressions here resolve home to. Use a major chord as the home base (I) of a major-key song, or as the destination of a V-I cadence. Major chords power the I-IV-V trinity (Twist and Shout, La Bamba, Wild Thing), the I-V-vi-IV pop progression (Let It Be, With or Without You, No Woman No Cry) and the IV chord in nearly every major-key song. They also brighten a minor-key passage when used on the relative major's degree.

    Common substitutions for D#

    • Major 7th — adds the 7th for a softer, jazzier color (great for ballads and verses)
    • Add9 — adds the 9th for sparkle without changing the chord function
    • Suspended 4 — replaces the 3rd with the 4th for tension that resolves back to major
    • 6th — adds the 6th for a vintage pop or country brightness
    Chords in the key of D# major
    Other D# chordsA–G
    Major chords in other keys
    Scales that work over D#
    Scales & guides for this chord

    D# Major Scale

    Works great over major chords

    Lydian Mode

    Add color to major chords

    Improvisation Basics

    Learn to solo over progressions

    D# chord FAQ

    Practice with Improvisio

    Use D# in a progression and see which scales work best.

    Try it in the trainer