The C# major family chords are the chords that are derived from the C# major scale. Each degree corresponds to a chord, which can be major, minor, or diminished, depending on its position in the scale. C# Major (I) Notes: C#, E#, G# This is the tonic chord, the home base. D# Minor (ii) Notes: D#, F#, A# a minor chord that creates tension and movement. E# Minor (iii) Notes: E#, G#, B# This is a minor chord often used for emotional or softer tones. (Note: E# is enharmonically the same as F, and B# is enharmonically the same as C.) F# Major (IV) Notes: F#, A#, C# The subdominant chord, adding brightness and transition. G# Major (V) Notes: G#, B#, D# The dominant chord, often used to create tension that resolves back to C# major. A# Minor (vi) Notes: A#, C#, E# The relative minor, often used for a softer or melancholic feel. B# Diminished (vii°) Notes: B#, D#, F# A diminished chord, adding dissonance and tension, leading back to the tonic (C# major). Fingerings: (Piano) C# Major: C# - E# (F) - G# D# Minor: D# - F# - A# E# Minor: E# (F) - G# - B# (C) F# Major: F# - A# - C# G# Major: G# - B# (C) - D# A# Minor: A# - C# - E# (F) B# (c) Diminished: B# (C) - D# - F# Practical Use Chords Progression: These chords form the basis for progressions in the key of C# major. A common progression in the key is I-IV-V-I (C# - F# - G# - C#). To add emotional depth, try a vi-IV-I-V (A# minor - F# major - C# major - G# major) progression.
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