What chord is this?

Chords, scales, harmony, melody, etc.
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I recently recorded a friend's song whose chords are based mainly around Am, Dm, E, but one of the chords has the following notes: D A B F. I assume this is some kind of variation on Dm, but what is it called? (the guitar fingering is X X 0 2 0 1)

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markheath wrote:I recently recorded a friend's song whose chords are based mainly around Am, Dm, E, but one of the chords has the following notes: D A B F. I assume this is some kind of variation on Dm, but what is it called? (the guitar fingering is X X 0 2 0 1)
It is most likely a half-diminished seventh on B. If the D is the lowest sounding note, the chord is in first inversion. Quite common in A minor, usually followed by chord V.
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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I'd guess it was a Dm with an added major 6th. So that's Dm-add6 or something? It's the one that sounds like *plays the chord* :D
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thanks, two choices already ;) Jumping Jack would you notate that as Dm-dim7 ?

If it helps to hear the chord in context, its the second chord in the intro to this song https://soundcloud.com/mark-heath1/suffering-servant

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markheath wrote:Jumping Jack would you notate that as Dm-dim7 ?
No, I would notate it as Bm7(b5), or possibly Bø.
If D is the bass note, it could be written Bm7(b5)/D.

My post on Scales, Modes and Chords might be helpful.
Unfamiliar words can be looked up in my Glossary of musical terms.
Also check out my Introduction to Music Theory.

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Sendy wrote:I'd guess it was a Dm with an added major 6th. So that's Dm-add6 or something? It's the one that sounds like *plays the chord* :D
Just Dm6 will do. Off the top of my head, Elanor Rigby uses a minor sixth chord, and I've always seen it notated as 'm6' (and the major version is just a '6' chord).

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Sendy wrote:I'd guess it was a Dm with an added major 6th. So that's Dm-add6 or something? It's the one that sounds like *plays the chord* :D
Yeah like sjm said it's just Dm6, since it's 1-b3-5-6, the add is for when you skip notes in between (Dm add9, there's no 7th ie it's not Dm9 f.ex).

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Thanks for the correction. I'm terrible at naming/theorizing these chords even though I use them ALL the time.
http://sendy.bandcamp.com/releases < My new album at Bandcamp! Now pay what you like!

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markheath wrote:I recently recorded a friend's song whose chords are based mainly around Am, Dm, E, but one of the chords has the following notes: D A B F. I assume this is some kind of variation on Dm, but what is it called? (the guitar fingering is X X 0 2 0 1)
It's a:

Dm6 D Minor 6th
Asus2sus4#5/D A/D Suspended 2nd Suspended 4th Sharp 5th
Bm7b5/D B/D Minor 7th Flat 5th
F6b5/D F/D 6th Flat 5th

http://jguitar.com/chordname?string5=1& ... &string0=x


Yeah, I think I'll go for the D minor 6th.
Bit snappier than: Oh can you just quickly play an Asus2sus4#5/D A/D Suspended 2nd Suspended 4th Sharp 5th in passing there before the A Major?

Might not get punched so hard on the nose.

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JumpingJackFlash wrote:
markheath wrote:I recently recorded a friend's song whose chords are based mainly around Am, Dm, E, but one of the chords has the following notes: D A B F. I assume this is some kind of variation on Dm, but what is it called? (the guitar fingering is X X 0 2 0 1)
It is most likely a half-diminished seventh on B. If the D is the lowest sounding note, the chord is in first inversion. Quite common in A minor, usually followed by chord V.
But it isn't. you've made an assumption based in a practice that this doesn't belong to. hearing it is key, and we find that this is a iv chord, 'Dm add 6' is what I would tend to say, 'Dm6' is typical. In folk/pop guitar, there isn't typically the kind of voice leading to bear out any iiø6/5 - V or something.

& 'm6'? m denotes a minor triad, here with a major sixth added to.

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