D flat Minor

Minor triad (1–♭3–5); stable minor color, relative to major by lowering the third.


The minor triad is one of the basic tertian chords: 1-♭3-5. Compared with a major triad, the lowered third darkens the color while the perfect fifth keeps a familiar open stability. It is the harmonic center of the natural minor mode on tonic, appears diatonically on multiple scale degrees in major and minor keys, and underpins countless melodies and progressions across classical, folk, jazz, and popular music.

Construction

Formula: 1-♭3-5. In Cm, spell C-E♭-G. Inversions follow standard triad inversion rules; first inversion is often called a sixth chord in classical figured-bass thinking.

Usage

Use as tonic minor, pre-dominant harmony (especially as ii in major), modal color on other roots, and as the simplest minor sonority in voicing studies.

Examples

  • Minor-key anthems and folk songs on tonic
  • Major-key ii–V progressions where ii is minor
  • Rock and pop verses built on minor triads for introspective mood

Play

Balance the third in the voicing so the minor quality is clear, experiment with doublings that support the bass line, and connect voices smoothly when moving to dominant harmony.

Ear-training cues

Hear a minor third above the root paired with a perfect fifth; darker than major, more settled than diminished or half-diminished chords.

Quality

minor

Aliases

mmin-

Similar chords

D5

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the D flat Minor chord

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Which intervals and notes are in the minor chord?

IntervalsemitonesNote
perfect unison0D
minor third3F
perfect fifth7A

To which mode does minor belong?

VI :: Minor on Major
II :: Dorian on Major
IV :: Dorian sharp four on Harmonic Minor
I :: Harmonic minor on Harmonic Minor
I :: Melodic minor on Melodic Minor
III :: Phrygian on Major