F# 13sus4

Notes:F# – B – C# – E – G# – D#
Formula:R-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13
Intervals:P1-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13
Scale Degrees:1-4-5-b7-9-13

Introduction

The F# 13sus4 piano chord (F#13sus4) consists of the notes F#, B, C#, E, G#, D#. Formula: R-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13 | Scale degrees: 1-4-5-b7-9-13.

Enharmonic equivalent: F♯ is enharmonically equivalent to G♭. See Gb 13sus4.

Notes

Notes:F# – B – C# – E – G# – D#

F# 13sus4 Inversions

PositionNotes
Root PositionF#4 – B4 – C#5 – E5 – D#6 – G#5
1st InversionB4 – C#5 – E5 – G#5 – D#6 – F#6
2nd InversionC#4 – E4 – G#4 – D#5 – B5 – F#5

Key Signature

The key of F# 13sus4 has 6 sharps: F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, E♯.

FCGDAE

Theory: Intervals

Formula: R-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13
Intervals: P1-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13

The F# 13sus4 is built by stacking intervals from the root note. The formula R-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13 describes the scale degrees used. The intervals P1-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13 show the distance between each note in the chord.

F# 13sus4 — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the F# 13sus4 chord?

The F# 13sus4 chord (F#13sus4) contains 6 notes: F#, B, C#, E, G#, D#. Formula: R-P4-P5-m7-M9-M13.

How is F#13sus4 used in music?

F#13sus4 is used in jazz, fusion, and contemporary music to add harmonic color. It appears as a dominant or tonic chord depending on context.

What is the scale degree formula for F#13sus4?

F#13sus4 uses scale degrees 1-4-5-b7-9-13, giving it its distinctive sound.

Practice Tips

  • Start by placing your thumb on F# and spacing remaining fingers across the chord.
  • Practice F#13sus4 slowly with separate hands before combining.
  • Listen carefully to the tension created by the altered tones in this chord.
  • Try voicing F#13sus4 in different octaves to find the most comfortable position.
  • Resolve F#13sus4 to a nearby chord to hear its function in context.