Notes
Notes in G♯ Sus2
G♯ Sus2 uses G♯ as the root, A♯ as the major second, and D♯ as the perfect fifth.
G♯
root
anchors the chord and gives the voicing its name.
A♯
major second
opens the chord up without locking it into a major or minor sound.
D♯
perfect fifth
keeps the chord grounded with a stable upper anchor.
Sound and feel
What G♯ Sus2 sounds like
G♯ Sus2 has an open, suspended sound.
Compared with a plain major chord, the missing third leaves the harmony more neutral and less final.
Playing tips
How to play G♯ Sus2 on guitar
Find the root on the low E string at fret 4 before you place the other fingers.
Place the lowest note first, then stack the rest of the movable shape across frets 1 to 4.
Let the full strum stay even from low E to high E.
Keep each fingertip vertical so the adjacent strings stay separate.
Land the widest reach first, then drop the remaining finger or fingers into place.
Pick through the strings once before you strum hard, and fix the first dull note you hear.
Theory
Why G♯ Sus2 works
G♯ Sus2 uses the formula 1 - 2 - 5.
Compared with G♯ Major, G♯ Sus2 replaces B♯ (3) with A♯ (2).
Replacing the third with the second removes the clear major-or-minor stamp and gives the chord its open quality.
Musical context
Where G♯ Sus2 commonly appears
G♯ Sus2 is usually used around a plain same-root chord rather than as a final resting point.
G♯ Sus2 commonly appears as an embellishment of the plain G♯ chord, especially when the progression wants motion without leaving the same harmonic spot.
G♯ Sus2 is especially common in repeated pop and worship strumming patterns, where the suspension resolves back into a plain chord on the same root.
resolution movement
G♯ Sus2 is more common as a motion chord than as a final resting chord, because the missing third leaves the harmony intentionally unfinished.
Quick answers
FAQ about G♯ Sus2
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Reference
Quick reference
Keep the notes, formula, and difficulty label in view while you practice.
- Notes
- G♯, A♯, and D♯
- Formula
- 1 - 2 - 5
- Main shape
- movable shape
- Root string
- low E string
- Featured difficulty
- Intermediate
Same root
G# chordsCompare this root across major, minor, suspended, seventh, power, and added-tone colors.