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Analysis

To understand what a sus chord really is and how it operates you have to know a little bit of
music theory. A normal major chord consists of the root, 3rd and 5th notes of the major scale
(1-3-5). If we take the C major scale for example: C D E F G A B C and you take the root
(1st), 3rd and 5th note of that scale you get C-E-G. The minor chord consists of the root, flat
3rd and 5th notes of the major scale (1-b3-5) and becomes C-Eb-G. Here’s where the sus
chords comes in…

The sus4 chord consists of the root, 4th and 5th notes of the major scale (1-4-5) = C F G. You
can see that the sus4 chord (“sus” stands for “suspended”.) replaces the third with the fourth
note.

The sus2 chord consists of the root, 2nd and 5th notes of the major scale (1-2-5) = C D G.
The sus2 chord replaces the third with the second note.

By removing the 3rd in a chord, the chord becomes neither major nor minor, as the 3rd
determines the happy major or sad minor sound. Therefor sus chords can be applied to both
major and minor chords.

In practice
Suspended chords have the tendency to resolve. The four and fifth in a sus4 chord creates
tension and so does the second and root in a sus2 chord. That’s why sus chords are often
played in combination with their parent chord.

A combination can be played like this:


A – Asus4 – A – Asus2 or
C – Csus2 – C – Csus4

or suspended combined with minor:


Em – Esus4 – Em – Esus4 or
Am – Asus4 – Am – Asus2

Suspended music
Here are some popular intros using suspended chords:
Summer of 69 – Bryan Adams:
Dsus2 – D – Dsus4 – D – Dsus2 – D (tab)

So this is christmas – John Lennon:


A – Asus2 – Asus4 – A (tab)

Crazy little thing called love – Queen:


D – Dsus4 – D – D – Dsus4 – D – D – Dsus4 – D – D – Dsus4 – D (tab)

However suspended chords can also last indefinitely without resolving to their parent chord
which happens a lot in jazz, but also in pop music.

Qualities
The sus2 chord has an open feel and sounds kind of wistful. It does have a slight tendency to
resolve but it doesn’t have that strong pull like the sus4 chord toward it’s parent chord which
makes it feel lightly stable. The Sus2 chord can therefor even be substituted for it’s parent
chord. So you could play Asus2 instead of A major.

The sus4 chord on the other hand has the quality that it fits really good at the end of a musical
piece using it on the fifth chord of the key and resolving to the I chord. So if you’re in the key
of G, you play Dsus4 – D (D is the fifth of G) and then go back to G major (the I chord).

Tips
– Practice and memorize the sus2 and sus4 chords below with their parent chords.
– Study popular suspended intros like the ones above for inspiration.
– Incorporate the use of suspended chords in your favorite songs. Make it your own.

Have a great one!

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