add9 and sus: recolouring a major chord

Intermediate

Hear how one added or changed note transforms the colour of a C major chord: add9, sus4 and sus2.

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Pattern

Transpose

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Tablature

How to do it

  1. Play open C major. Then C add9: add the 9th (D) on string 2 (fret 3). It sounds bright and open.
  2. Now C sus4: swap the 3rd (E) for the 4th (F) — it sounds tense, "wanting to resolve". And C sus2: swap the 3rd for the 2nd (D) — it sounds clean and suspended.
  3. Always return to plain C major at the end to hear how the 3rd "resolves" the tension of the sus chords.

Tips

  • Sus chords have no 3rd, so they are neither major nor minor: that is why they sound "open".

Metronome

Target tempo: 66 BPM (Range 40112)

Metronome
66 BPM

Tuner

You are playing:

-15c
+15c
-50c0+50c

Turn on the tuner to check your intonation while you practise (bends, vibrato…).

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