
The C Major 7 chord is produced by taking the 1 (root), 3, 5 and 7 of the C Major scale.The C Major 7 chord contains the notes C, E, G and B.If you’ve come to this page just to view some chord diagrams for C Major 7, here they are. For example, the C minor 7 chord can be produced by lowering the 3rd and 7th of the C Major 7 chord. It can also be used as a starting point, when figuring out other chords that have C as a root note.

The Major 7 chord in general is considered a kind of default chord, as it contains no altered notes of the Major scale (1, 3, 5, 7).

It is the first chord in the key of C Major, which is arguably the most used key in music theory, because it contains no sharps or flats. The C Major 7 chord is a very popular chord. It is essentially a C Major chord, with the 7th note of the Major scale added. It is produced by taking the root, 3rd, 5th and 7th of the C Major scale.

The Bbm7b5 chord is most commonly played with the root note on the 6th fret of the 6th string (2nd shape in the picture below).

This is an example of how Bbm7b5 can sound beautiful in context. Try playing a B chord, then a Bbm7b5 chord and then return to B. However, when played in the context of other chords, it can sound beautiful. The half diminished chord can sound like a very dissonant chord, when played in isolation. It can be viewed as an Bbm7 chord with a flat 5 or a Bb diminished chord with an added b7. The Bbm7b5 chord (B flat minor 7 flat 5, or B flat half diminished) contains the notes Bb, Db, Fb and Ab, which is the 1 (root) b3, b5 and b7 of the Bb Major scale.
