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    1. Home
    2. Chord Library
    3. A
    4. Suspended fourth

    A Suspended fourth

    Suspended fourth chord (1–4–5); expectant, open sound that strips modal identity by substituting the third with a perfect fourth.

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    Which intervals and notes are in the A Suspended fourth chord?

    Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.

    Which scales can you play on the A Suspended fourth chord?

    Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.

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    The suspended fourth chord—commonly abbreviated as the sus4 chord—is a highly functional harmonic structure that alters the core triad by substituting the traditional major or minor third with a perfect fourth above the root. This substitution creates a unique harmonic profile: it strips the chord of its modal identity (leaving it neither major nor minor) while introducing an unstable, expectant tension. Characterized by an open yet urgent quality, the sus4 chord is historically the definitive tool for delaying harmonic resolution, making it an indispensable asset in classical counterpoint, modal jazz, and pop/rock arrangement.

    Construction & Acoustic Reality

    Interval Formula: 1 - 4 - 5
    • In Csus4: The notes are spelled C - F - G.
    • The Harmonic Logic: A basic sus4 chord consists of a perfect fourth from the root to the second note (5 semitones from C to F) and a major second from the second to the third note (2 semitones from F to G). Measured from the root note, these intervals form a Perfect Unison (0 semitones), a Perfect Fourth (5 semitones), and a Perfect Fifth (7 semitones).
    • Acoustic Properties: The acoustic friction in a sus4 chord stems from the close proximity of the perfect fourth to the perfect fifth—separated by an interval of a major second. Because the human ear is acoustically conditioned to hear the perfect fifth as an immutable harmonic anchor, the fourth acts as a displacement of the expected third. This creates a strong psychological pull, generating a powerful desire for the fourth to resolve downward by a step to restore the stability of a standard triad.

    Harmonic Usage & Functions

    In functional arrangements, the sus4 chord operates as a tool for managing tension, momentum, and harmonic delay:

    • Delaying dominant resolution: In classical, jazz, and pop cadences, the sus4 chord is primarily used on the dominant (V) chord to build anticipation before the final resolution to the tonic (I). The fourth is held over from the previous chord before dropping down to the third (Vsus4 - V - I), maximizing the forward momentum of the progression.
    • Unresolved modal tension: In modern pop, rock, and fusion, the sus4 chord is frequently left unresolved. By refusing to let the fourth drop to the third, writers create a hovering, fluid texture. This allows the music to float statically over a groove without ever committing to a definitive major or minor tonality.
    • Harmonic expansion over pedal points: The sus4 chord is highly effective for creating movement over a static bass note. Alternating between a standard triad and its sus4 counterpart allows an arranger to introduce cyclical tension and release without changing the fundamental root of the chord.

    Historical Context and Development

    The evolution of the sus4 chord reflects the broader liberation of dissonance in Western music history. In Renaissance and Baroque counterpoint, a suspension was strictly regulated by a three-step rule: preparation (the note held from a prior chord), suspension (the tension over the new root), and mandatory resolution (the downward step to the third). By the late 20th century, rock, folk, and jazz broke these rigid rules. Composers and musicians began treating the sus4 chord as an independent, self-contained harmonic color, transforming it from a temporary transitional element into a powerful primary destination.

    Voice Leading & Practical Execution

    When arranging or tracking sus4 chords, careful consideration of interval voicing directly impacts the clarity of the musical texture:

    Managing third and fourth interactions: Because the suspended fourth is specifically replacing the third, playing both notes simultaneously in the same octave creates a harsh, clashing minor second interval that destroys the open nature of the chord. Ensure that the third is entirely omitted from the lower and middle registers. If you wish to include both the third and the fourth to create a richer jazz texture, place the third high above the fourth in the upper extension register, effectively transforming the structure into a dominant 11th voicing.

    Ear-Training Cues

    To identify a sus4 chord by ear, train your brain to recognize a distinct sense of anticipation and openness. It lacks the settled finality of a major or minor triad, yet it does not sound unstable or dissonant like a diminished or augmented chord. Instead, a sus4 chord possesses an expectant, leaning quality—sounding clean, bright, and hollow due to the combination of the perfect fourth and fifth, but remaining inherently unfinished until it resolves.

    A 5
    A Minor
    A Major
    A Augmented heptatonic
    A Balinese
    A Bebop
    A Bebop locrian
    A Bebop major
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    A Chromatic
    A Composite blues
    A Dorian
    A Dorian ♭2
    A Double harmonic major
    A Egyptian
    A Harmonic major
    A Harmonic minor
    A Ichikosucho
    A In-sen
    A Ionian pentatonic
    A Kafi raga
    A Kumoijoshi
    A Melodic minor
    A Messiaen's mode 4
    A Messiaen's mode 5
    A Messiaen's mode 7
    A Minor major seven pentatonic
    A Minor bebop
    A Minor blues
    A Minor hexatonic
    A Minor pentatonic
    A Minor six diminished
    A Minor six pentatonic
    A Mixolydian
    A Mixolydian flat sixth
    A Mixolydian pentatonic
    A Neopolitan major
    A Phrygian
    A Phrygian dominant
    A Piongio
    A Purvi raga
    A Ritusen
    A Spanish heptatonic
    A Vietnamese one
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    0A
    5D
    7E
    Perfect unison
    Perfect fourth
    Perfect fifth