F#mMaj7 Ukulele Chord
F#mMaj7 simmers with dark elegance, built from F#, A, C# and the shimmering F major seventh. Positioned up the neck, it delivers that classic suspense-film tension, equally at home in moody jazz comping and dramatic, slow-moving cinematic chord changes.
Also known as
- F#mM7
- F#-Δ7
- GbmM7
- Gb-Δ7
- F# mM7
- F# -Δ7
- Gb mM7
- Gb -Δ7
- GbmMaj7
- F# mMaj7
- Gb mMaj7
- F#m(maj7)
- F#minMaj7
- Gbm(maj7)
- GbminMaj7
- G-flatmM7
- G-flat-Δ7
- F# m(maj7)
- F# minMaj7
- F-sharpmM7
- F-sharp-Δ7
- Gb m(maj7)
- Gb minMaj7
- G-flat mM7
- G-flat -Δ7
- F-sharp mM7
- F-sharp -Δ7
- G-flatmMaj7
- F-sharpmMaj7
- G-flat mMaj7
- F-sharp mMaj7
- G-flatm(maj7)
- G-flatminMaj7
- F-sharpm(maj7)
- F-sharpminMaj7
- G-flat m(maj7)
- G-flat minMaj7
- F-sharp m(maj7)
- F-sharp minMaj7
- F# minor-major 7th
- Gb minor-major 7th
- F# minor-major seventh
- Gb minor-major seventh
- G-flat minor-major 7th
- F-sharp minor-major 7th
- G-flat minor-major seventh
- F-sharp minor-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
This is the FmMaj7 grip shifted up, so barre the G, C and E strings at fret 1 (relative to the position) with your index, add the pinky on the C string and the ring finger on the A string. The combination of a tight barre and a long pinky stretch is demanding — roll the index slightly onto its side and keep steady pressure so no string buzzes.