C sharp Major

Major triad (1-3-5); stable tonic color and foundation of tonal harmony.


The major triad is built from a major third and a perfect fifth above the root: 1-3-5. It is the simplest stable sonority in common-practice tonality and the harmonic anchor for countless melodies in classical, folk, pop, rock, gospel, and jazz. Because it contains no seventh, it feels comparatively “closed” and settled compared with seventh chords—excellent for beginnings, arrivals, and clear statements of key.

Construction

In C major: C-E-G. The interval from root to third defines major quality; the fifth reinforces stability and supports tuning clarity in ensembles. On guitar and piano, doublings and register choice change timbre more than function.

Usage

Use major triads for tonic and subdominant function (I and IV in major keys), for strong cadential arrivals, and as harmonic pillars under melodies that emphasize the first, third, or fifth degrees. In pop production, triads are often layered with extensions in other instruments while the harmony remains triadic at the core.

Examples

  • Classical cadences and hymn-like progressions built on I and IV triads
  • Rock and pop choruses that land squarely on a major I
  • Folk and country harmony emphasizing open triadic stacks

Play

Practice smooth voice leading between triads in a key, experiment with inversions to control bass motion, and notice how sparse triads leave room for melody and rhythm section detail.

Harmonic function in progressions

In major keys, the major triad on the tonic is the primary resolution target. On IV it provides stable contrast while still feeling “home-ish” compared with dominant harmony.

Ear-training cues

Recognize the major third quality at the bottom of the chord and the stable fifth above the root.

Quality

major

Aliases

M^maj

Similar chords

C5

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the C sharp Major chord

Practice the major chord

Open the app and start your daily workout!

Learn music theory with sonid

Available on Android and iOS

Which intervals and notes are in the major chord?

IntervalsemitonesNote
perfect unison0C
major third4E
perfect fifth7G

To which mode does major belong?

I :: Major on Major
IV :: Lydian on Major
VI :: Lydian sharp ninth on Harmonic Minor
IV :: Lydian dominant on Melodic Minor
V :: Mixolydian on Major
V :: Mixolydian flat sixth on Melodic Minor
V :: Phrygian dominant on Harmonic Minor