A11 Chord

A11 (A 11th chord)

Like any 11th chord, the A11 chord is formed by playing the root, the major third, the perfect fifth, the minor 7th, the major 9th and the major 11th. The third is often omitted due to dissonance with the minor 9th interval. It equals to playing the 1st, the 3rd and 5th, the flat 7th and the 9th and the 11th degree of the A major scale.

Notation

Listen to A11

A11 without the dissonant third (C#):

How To Play A11 On The Piano

You can play the A 11th chord by playing in any order the following notes: A, C#, E, G, B, D.

The third is often omitted because the minor 9th interval between the third and the 11th is dissonant.

The inversions of the A11 chord

  • Root position: A, C#, E, G, B, D
  • Inversion 1: C#, E, G, B, D, A
  • Inversion 2: E, G, B, D, A, C#
  • Inversion 3: G, B, D, A, C#, E
  • Inversion 4: B, D, A, C#, E, G
  • Inversion 5: D, A, C#, E, G

Note: the third (C#) is often left out of the A11th chord.

Video: A11 Chord On The Piano

coming soon


Fingering for the Left and Right Hand

Coming soon.

Scales in which the A11 chord occurs

  • D major
  • D melodic minor
  • D ionian
  • B natural
  • E dorian