A#augMaj7 Ukulele Chord
Hazy and suspended, this A#augMaj7 colors a major 7th with a sharpened fifth, sounding the notes A#, D, F#, and A. It serves as an evocative passing chord for jazz harmony and dreamy, cinematic textures.
Also known as
- A#+M7
- A#+Δ7
- Bb+M7
- Bb+Δ7
- A# +M7
- A# +Δ7
- Bb +M7
- Bb +Δ7
- A#+maj7
- Bb+maj7
- A# +maj7
- Bb +maj7
- BbaugMaj7
- B-flat+M7
- B-flat+Δ7
- A# augMaj7
- A-sharp+M7
- A-sharp+Δ7
- Bb augMaj7
- B-flat +M7
- B-flat +Δ7
- A#aug(maj7)
- A-sharp +M7
- A-sharp +Δ7
- Bbaug(maj7)
- B-flat+maj7
- A# aug(maj7)
- A-sharp+maj7
- Bb aug(maj7)
- B-flat +maj7
- A-sharp +maj7
- B-flataugMaj7
- A-sharpaugMaj7
- B-flat augMaj7
- A-sharp augMaj7
- B-flataug(maj7)
- A-sharpaug(maj7)
- B-flat aug(maj7)
- A-sharp aug(maj7)
- A# augmented major 7th
- Bb augmented major 7th
- A# augmented major seventh
- Bb augmented major seventh
- B-flat augmented major 7th
- A-sharp augmented major 7th
- B-flat augmented major seventh
- A-sharp augmented major seventh
How to Play This Chord
Position your fingers on the fretboard as shown in the diagram. The vertical lines represent the four strings, from the top G string (left) to the A string (right), and the horizontal lines are the frets. Numbers inside the dots indicate which finger to use: 1 (index), 2 (middle), 3 (ring), 4 (pinky). An X means don't play that string; an O means play it open. A bar spanning multiple strings means one finger presses across all of them at once — this is known as a barre chord.
Tips & Tricks
Set your index on the C string at fret 2, the middle finger on the E string at fret 2, and the ring finger on the G string at fret 3, leaving the A string open. The ring finger reaching back to the G string is the catch — keep it arched high so it doesn't brush the open A string.