D# Power Chord Guitar Chord

RRootP5Perfect 5th
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Voicing Positions (6)

10RP5RP5R11 13 13 15 11 11
3×RRP5x 6 8 8 4 6
10RP5RP5×11 13 13 15 11 x
3P5RRP56 6 8 8 4 6
××RP5R×x x 1 3 4 x
5×RP5R××x 6 8 8 x x

Interval Colors

In shape.music, every interval has a unique color. The colors follow the function of each note relative to the root — so they change when you switch chords.

R
Root
m2
Minor 2nd
M2
Major 2nd
m3
Minor 3rd
M3
Major 3rd
P4
Perfect 4th
♭5
Tritone
P5
Perfect 5th
m6
Minor 6th
M6
Major 6th
m7
Minor 7th
M7
Major 7th

D# Power Chord Chord

The D# Power Chord chord is built from the intervals: Root, and Perfect 5th. It contains the notes D#, and A#. Power chords contain only the root and fifth — no third — giving them a neutral, versatile sound.

What D# Power Chord Is

The D# Power Chord is a two-note power chord built from the root and the perfect fifth. Without a third, it has no major or minor identity — it is harmonically neutral, which is exactly what makes it the workhorse chord of rock, metal, and punk. The absence of a third also makes power chords sound clean through high-gain distortion, where stacked thirds would otherwise produce a muddy clash of overtones.

How D# Power Chord Sounds

Power chords sound forceful, immediate, and rhythmically driving. They have no inherent melodic flavor, which means the surrounding melody, bass, and rhythm decide the emotional tone. A D# Power Chord under a melancholy melody will feel sad; the same chord under a triumphant melody will feel triumphant. This adaptability is why power chords dominate riff-based music.

How To Use D# Power Chord In A Progression

Power chords appear most commonly on the I, IV, and V degrees of a key — the same three chords that drive 12-bar blues — but because they have no third they can be used freely in any major or minor context without clashing. Hold a D# Power Chord on the bass while the lead guitar plays a melodic line, and the harmony stays out of the way. Two-note power chords also voice cleanly across distortion in a way full triads do not.

Playing D# Power Chord On Guitar

On guitar, D# Power Chord is typically played as a two- or three-note shape on the bottom strings, using the index finger on the root and the ring finger on the fifth a fret-and-string up. The shape is movable, so the same fingering covers every power chord on every root just by sliding it around. Adding a third note an octave above the root thickens the chord without adding any new harmonic colour.

Related Chords

Same root (D#)

D#D#mD#7D#maj7D#m7D#dimD#augD#sus2

Same quality (Power Chord)

D Power ChordE Power ChordF Power ChordG# Power ChordA# Power Chord

See the music. Every interval has a color.

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