A♯/E♯ guitar shapes

Popular fretboard positions with fingering suggestions

Showing 8 of 63 playable shapes

About the chord

A♯ major / E♯ (2nd inversion)

The A♯ major major chord, built from the root (A♯ major), major third C𝄪, and perfect fifth E♯, delivers a bright, harmonious sound that feels resolved and complete. Its balanced structure makes it the foundation of Western harmony, widely used across all genres to convey joy, strength, and stability. With E♯ in the bass, this voicing functions as the 2nd inversion of A♯ major.

Root note: A♯
Bass note: E♯
Chord tones: 3
Playable shapes: 63

Chord tones

A♯C𝄪E♯

Notes & Intervals

Each note below shows how the chord is built from its root. This is the theory layer underneath the fretboard shapes.

A♯ Unison (Root) 1

The root anchors the chord and defines its tonal center.

C𝄪 Major Third 3

This note defines the chord's major quality and brings brightness to the sound.

E♯ Perfect Fifth 5

The fifth reinforces stability and gives the chord its strong harmonic frame.

Related Articles

Articles that reference this chord and explain how to use it in your playing.