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4.4: Triads

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    A triad is a chord constructed with three notes. The three notes are stacked on top of one another in consecutive thirds. Triads are a basic chord structure and the basis of how other types of chords are constructed. When the three notes are stacked, the lowest note is called the root, with the other two referred to as the third and fifth, which corresponds to their scale degree. For this example, the root is A, the third is C, and the fifth is E.

    image31.png

    There are four kinds in triads we will discuss:

    • Major
    • Minor
    • Augmented
    • Diminished

    The Major triad consists of a Major 3rd between the root and the third, and then a minor third between the
    third and fifth, with a Perfect 5th between the root and the fifth.

    image32.png

    The minor triad consists of a minor 3rd between the root and the third, and then a Major third between the
    third and fifth, with a Perfect 5th between the root and the fifth.

    image33.png

    The diminished triad consists of a minor 3rd between the root and the third, and then another minor third
    between the third and fifth, with a diminished 5th between the root and the fifth.

    image34.png

    The augmented triad consists of a Major 3rd between the root and the third, and then another Major third
    between the third and fifth, with an augmented 5th between the root and the fifth.

    image35.png

    Triad Inversions

    An inverted triad still contains the same pitches but does not have the root as the lowest note. A triad in root position has the root as the lowest note, first inversion is when the third of the chord is the lowest note, and second inversion is when the fifth is the lowest note. Here is a diagram showing the three triad positions:

    image36.png


    This page titled 4.4: Triads is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jill Wilson and Natalie Steele Royston (Iowa State University Digital Press) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.