Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Time to Get The "D" in Diminished


Many musicians as about the elusive diminished chords. To be honest there is no secret.

Dimished Chord Formula:

Root Note----Flatted 3rd-----Flatted 5

The most amazing thing about diminished chords is that they add the dissonance in your playing and that's what the "D" stands for.

Let's look at at the C diminshed chord


Piano Tip # 1

  • You can move to any note in the chord that is a half step above. 

For example: Play the C diminished chord and go to E. The reason behind this is because its a passing chord. The Eb leads to the E if you look at the chord closely.

One of the building blocks of diminished chords is the fact that they have a tritone inside of them. If you dissect the chord you will see that there are two tritones that exist.

Tritone # 1: C and Gb




Tritone # 2: Eb and A



I will explain further along in another post about tritones. However, back to diminished chords

Piano Tip # 2

  • Diminished chords can be used as a passing tone to get to the next closest note.

For example: If I am in the Key of C and I want to get to D which is the 2 chord. How would I get there?

Chord #1: C major chord (C, E, G)



Chord # 2 C diminished chord (C, Eb, Gb, A)



Chord # 3 D minor chord (A, D, F)



This is just a sample of what diminished chords can do. When you practice the positions and the fingering you can do wonders effectively.

All the best,

-Jamie