Notes
Notes in D♯6
D♯6 uses D♯ as the root, F♯# as the major third, A♯ as the perfect fifth, and B♯ as the major sixth.
D♯
root
anchors the chord and gives the voicing its name.
F♯#
major third
tells the ear that the chord belongs to the major sound.
A♯
perfect fifth
keeps the chord grounded with a stable upper anchor.
B♯
major sixth
adds warmth and movement without the sharper pull of a seventh.
Sound and feel
What D♯6 sounds like
D♯6 has a warm major sound with a little extra motion.
Compared with a plain major chord, the sixth gives the top of the voicing a softer, more vintage feel.
Playing tips
How to play D♯6 on guitar
Find the root on the A string at fret 6 before you place the other fingers.
Place the lowest note first, then stack the rest of the higher-position shape across frets 6 to 8.
Start the strum from the A string so the low E string stay out.
Keep each fingertip vertical so the adjacent strings stay separate.
Pick through the strings once before you strum hard, and fix the first dull note you hear.
Check the fret number before each full strum so the whole shape does not drift a fret high or low.
Theory
Why D♯6 works
D♯6 uses the formula 1 - 3 - 5 - 6.
Compared with D♯ Major, D♯6 adds B♯ (6).
The sixth adds color above the triad without creating the sharper pull that a seventh usually introduces.
Musical context
Where D♯6 commonly appears
D♯6 is easiest to place once you hear which same-root and related-key chords it connects to.
D♯6 commonly appears as a tonic chord in major keys when the harmony needs an extension without shifting into dominant function.
warmer tonic color
D♯6 also fits older pop and swing-influenced writing, where sixth chords are part of the tonic vocabulary.
color-major use
D♯6 is more common as a color chord than as the very first major shape most players memorize.
Quick answers
FAQ about D♯6
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Reference
Quick reference
Keep the notes, formula, and difficulty label in view while you practice.
- Notes
- D♯, F♯#, A♯, and B♯
- Formula
- 1 - 3 - 5 - 6
- Main shape
- higher-position shape
- Root string
- A string
- Featured difficulty
- Intermediate
Same root
D# chordsCompare this root across major, minor, suspended, seventh, power, and added-tone colors.