E Fifth


If you play guitar, you will probably know this chord as a powerchord. It only has two notes, the perfect prime (perfect unison) and the perfect fifth. The chord can never be major or minor, because it does not contain a third.

Usage and play

The powerchord is a very strong sounding chord and is being used a lot in rock, punk and metal to lay out a solid and heavy foundation. The main reason why this chord sounds so heavy is because there is little to no tension between the two notes being used. For instance, if you try to play a C and a Db (or C#) at the same time (which is not really a chord) you can hear tension between the notes, they have a great necessity to resolve and release tension. Play a C and a G together sounds very monochrome, almost as if it is the same note. This makes the chord very solid.

The powerchord is relatively easy to play on both piano and guitar. But then again, anything at higher speeds becomes more complex.

Shifting this chord using a pentatonic minor scale (or blues scale) as tonics actually creates a lot of dissonant notes. However, because the chord sounds so strong and the shifted notes pass along quite rapidly it sounds very natural.

Examples

Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit

Eric Clapton - Cocaine

Deep Purple - Smoke on the Water

The White Stripes - Seven Nation Army

Quality

Unknown

Aliases

5

Similar chords

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the E Fifth chord

Which intervals and notes are in the E5 chord?

IntervalsemitonesNote
perfect unison0E
perfect fifth7B

Select a tonic to transpose

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