A Altered Dominant Chord

Symbol: A7alt

Diagrams

Staff Notation

Staff Notation

Piano Keyboard

A7alt chord – keys A, C#, Eb, G, Bb, F highlightedPiano keyboard with keys A, C#, Eb, G, Bb, F highlighted. A is the root note.AGFC#EbBb
A7alt chord – keys A, C#, Eb, G, Bb, F highlightedPiano keyboard with keys A, C#, Eb, G, Bb, F highlighted. A is the root note.A

Guitar

Guitar chord diagram for A7alt (5fr)Guitar chord voicing with notes A, Eb, G, C#, F, Bb.A7alt (5fr)52334

Intervals

NoteIntervalSemitones
AP10
C#M34
Ebd56
Gm710
Bbm91
Fm68

About the A Altered Dominant Chord

The A Altered Dominant chord is built from the notes A, C#, Eb, G, Bb, F. These notes are derived by stacking intervals above the root note A, following the interval pattern that defines every Altered Dominant chord. Understanding how a chord is constructed from intervals is one of the most valuable skills in music theory, because it allows you to build the chord in any key and recognize it in any context.

You can use this chord in a variety of musical contexts. Try exploring the scales that contain these notes to discover which keys this chord naturally belongs to. Each scale listed above shares all the notes of this chord, making it a diatonic chord within that key. Understanding these relationships helps with songwriting, improvisation, and arranging.

Try A7alt in the Chord Identifier →