šŸŽµ Chords

A chord is three or more notes played at the same time. For WJEC GCSE you need to know triads, basic chord types, and how chords function in a key.

Triads

A triad is a three-note chord built by stacking two thirds above a root note. The four types differ in which thirds are used.

TypeSoundExample (C)
MajorBright and happyC – E – G
MinorDark and sadC – Eā™­ – G
DiminishedTense and unstableC – Eā™­ – Gā™­
AugmentedUnsettled, unresolvedC – E – G♯

Chords in a Key

Each note of a major scale can be used as the root of a triad built from notes within that key. These are numbered with Roman numerals. In C major:

NumeralChordTypeName
IC – E – GMajorTonic — home chord
IID – F – AMinorSupertonic
IIIE – G – BMinorMediant
IVF – A – CMajorSubdominant
VG – B – DMajorDominant — creates tension
VIA – C – EMinorSubmediant
VIIB – D – FDiminishedLeading note
Key fact: Chords I, IV, and V are the most important — they appear in almost all tonal music. The V chord creates tension that resolves back to I.

Cadences

A cadence is a chord progression at the end of a phrase that gives a sense of pause or ending. You must know all four for WJEC.

CadenceChordsFeel
PerfectV → IStrong, finished — like a full stop
ImperfectAny → VUnfinished, questioning — like a comma
PlagalIV → IGentle, "Amen" ending
InterruptedV → any (not I)Surprise — expected perfect, got something else

Inversions

A chord is inverted when a note other than the root is in the bass. WJEC expects you to identify root position and first and second inversions.

PositionBass noteSymbol
Root positionRoot5/3 or just the chord letter
First inversionThird6/3 or letter + b
Second inversionFifth6/4 or letter + c