A chord that consists of a minor third and a tritone. A diminished chord is triad built on the 7th degree of the major scale, taken from a diminished scale, or constructed from two stacked minor thirds. In a diminished chord, the tritone splits the octave, which means it has no real tonal center, and wants to resolve like a dominant chord. For example, an A diminished chord contains the notes A, C, and Eb, and would want to resolve like an F7 dominant chord, which contains the same notes (F, A, C, and Eb). Diminished chords are fairly common in jazz, somewhat less common in classical music, and occasionally used in pop music, where they’re generally often on the second scale degree.
Related Articles:
Vertex by Gator Pedalboard | Pedalboards for Anyone
1
Vertex by Gator Pedalboard | Pedalboards for Anyone
Recording Shootout: $500 vs. $2,500 vs. $10,000 vs. $100,000 Rigs
2
Recording Shootout: $500 vs. $2,500 vs. $10,000 vs. $100,000 Rigs
We Checked Out Mirador's Live Rigs
3
We Checked Out Mirador's Live Rigs
Kanto Audio Ora 4 Powered Bookshelf Speakers Overview
4
Kanto Audio Ora 4 Powered Bookshelf Speakers Overview
EVH Wolfgang Special Demo Starring Ben Eller
5
EVH Wolfgang Special Demo Starring Ben Eller
Explore the Best of Guitar Gallery – May 2026
6
Explore the Best of Guitar Gallery – May 2026
Tromana CL300 Student Clarinet Demo
7
Tromana CL300 Student Clarinet Demo
Tromana FL300 Student Flute Demo
8
Tromana FL300 Student Flute Demo
Inspiration. Information. Passion.
Being music makers ourselves, we love geeking out on all things gear. From the tweakiest techniques to the biggest ideas, our experts work hard to constantly supply inSync with a steady stream of helpful, in-depth demos, reviews, how-tos, news, and interviews. With over 28,000 articles and counting, inSync is your FREE resource for breaking news, reviews, demos, interviews, and more.