Finger Positions

Am6/G# diagram
Root Note A
Name A minor sixth over G#
Intervals 1P-3m-5P-6M
Relative Minor C
Notes G#, A, C, E, F#
Aliases Am6, A-6

How to play the Am6/G# Chord

The Am6/G# is a fundamental minor chord in guitar music. To play this chord correctly, ensure your fingers are placed precisely on the frets indicated in the diagram above.

Music Theory Analysis

From a theoretical perspective, the A minor sixth over G# is built using the 1P, 3m, 5P, 6M intervals. In the key of A Major, this chord functions as the I chord.

Common Progressions

In music composition, the Am6/G# chord is often used to create tension or resolution.

I-V-vi-IV

vi-IV-I-V

The Diatonic Family

Understanding the "family" of chords that belong to A helps with transposition and ear training.

Triads

Scale Compatibility

View All Scales
Major Blues Melodic Minor Dorian Minor Six Pentatonic Flat Three Pentatonic Dorian B2 Dorian #4 Lydian Diminished Neopolitan Major Hungarian Major Lydian #9 Bebop Minor Minor Six Diminished Half-Whole Diminished Kafi Raga

* 15 scales found containing the notes G#, A, C, E, F#.

Acoustic & Digital Analysis

Digital footprint of the Am6/G# chord for MIDI programming and synthesizer sound design.

MIDI Numbers 68, 69, 60, 64, 66
Frequencies (Hz)

415.3046975799451, 440, 261.6255653005986, 329.6275569128699, 369.9944227116344