A#m7 Ukulele Chord
A warm, jazzy minor seventh spelling A#, C#, F and G#. Its smooth, laid-back sound fits jazz, funk, soul and bossa nova, and it works as a mellow minor chord in keys like C# major or A# minor.
Also known as
- A#-7
- Bbm7
- Bb-7
- A# m7
- A# -7
- Bb m7
- Bb -7
- A#min7
- Bbmin7
- A# min7
- Bb min7
- B-flatm7
- B-flat-7
- A-sharpm7
- A-sharp-7
- B-flat m7
- B-flat -7
- A-sharp m7
- A-sharp -7
- B-flatmin7
- A-sharpmin7
- B-flat min7
- A-sharp min7
- A# minor 7th
- Bb minor 7th
- A# minor seventh
- Bb minor seventh
- B-flat minor 7th
- A-sharp minor 7th
- B-flat minor seventh
- A-sharp minor 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
This is a one-finger barre shape: lay your index flat across all four strings at the first fret and press firmly. First-fret barres are tough because the strings sit higher there, so push your thumb against the back of the neck for support and roll your index slightly onto its side. It's movable, so sliding up two frets gives you Bm7.