Chord shapes

G♯7 guitar chord

Change chords fast with the field below.

Chord diagram

Shape 1 of 3

E7-shape barre · Frets 4-6

G♯7

34567
E
B
G
D
A
E
Related chords

Shape difficulty

Beginner / Intermediate

Main challenge: Getting every fretted note down together cleanly so the chord sounds even instead of partially muted.

Chord tones

Root notes stay highlighted so the voicing reads faster at a glance.

G♯1D♯5F♯b7C3
RootChord tone

Notes

Notes in G♯7

G♯7 uses G♯ as the root, B♯ as the major third, D♯ as the perfect fifth, and F♯ as the minor seventh.

G♯

root

1

anchors the chord and gives the voicing its name.

B♯

major third

3

tells the ear that the chord belongs to the major sound.

D♯

perfect fifth

5

keeps the chord grounded with a stable upper anchor.

F♯

minor seventh

b7

adds forward pull and softens the finality of a plain triad.

Sound and feel

What G♯7 sounds like

G♯7 has a tense, bluesy, forward-leaning sound.

Compared with a plain major chord, the added flat seventh stops the harmony from feeling fully settled and points it toward resolution.

Playing tips

How to play G♯7 on guitar

Root anchor

Find the root on the low E string at fret 4 before you place the other fingers.

Setup

Place the lowest note first, then stack the rest of the movable shape across frets 4 to 6.

Strum path

Let the full strum stay even from low E to high E.

Clearance

Keep each fingertip vertical so the adjacent strings stay separate.

Check

Pick through the strings once before you strum hard, and fix the first dull note you hear.

Position

Check the fret number before each full strum so the whole shape does not drift a fret high or low.

Theory

Why G♯7 works

Formula1 - 3 - 5 - b7

G♯7 uses the formula 1 - 3 - 5 - b7.

Compared with G♯ Major, G♯7 adds F♯ (b7).

The major third keeps the chord bright while the flat seventh adds the tension that makes dominant harmony so directional.

Musical context

Where G♯7 commonly appears

G♯7 is usually a directional chord whose job is to lead into the next harmony.

G♯7 most commonly appears as the V chord in the major key a fourth above, where it wants to resolve strongly back to the I chord.

G♯7 is also a stock sound on the I chord in 12-bar blues, where the tension is part of the style rather than something that resolves immediately.

turnaround and blues use

G♯7 is more common as a function chord than as a quiet resting chord, which is why it shows up so often near turnarounds, cadences, and blues movement.

Quick answers

FAQ about G♯7

Explore next

Related chords and next sounds

Compare simpler versions, related harmony, and matching scales.

Reference

Quick reference

Keep the notes, formula, and difficulty label in view while you practice.

Notes
G♯, B♯, D♯, and F♯
Formula
1 - 3 - 5 - b7
Main shape
movable shape
Root string
low E string
Featured difficulty
Beginner / Intermediate

Same root

G# chords

Compare this root across major, minor, suspended, seventh, power, and added-tone colors.