Chord Detail
E♭ Minor Triad
Ebm is a Eb minor triad — formed from a minor third and perfect fifth above the root. The lowered third gives it a darker, more introspective quality compared to the major triad, making it one of the most emotionally expressive sounds in music.
The minor triad is built by stacking a minor third (3 semitones) and then a major third (3+4 = perfect fifth, 7 semitones) above the root. Ebm uses the notes Eb, F#, Bb. The minor third (F#) — sitting one semitone lower than in a major chord — is what gives this chord its characteristic darker, more introspective quality. Psychoacoustically, the minor third resonates less with the harmonic series than the major third, creating a subtle but profound emotional difference. In harmonic function, minor chords often appear as the vi chord in major keys or as the tonic i in minor keys.
Formula: 1 – ♭3 – 5
1Root0 semitones♭3Minor Third3 semitones5Perfect Fifth7 semitonesDark, introspective, melancholic, and emotionally rich. The foundational sound of sadness and depth.
Minor chords introduce depth and emotional weight through a lowered third degree. They carry a sense of longing, introspection, or quiet sadness — without collapsing into chaos. The minor triad is the second most universal sound in music.
🌧️ Other melancholic sounds to explore
The close-position minor triad (root–flat third–fifth) works well across registers. On piano, the minor third sits just one semitone lower than in a major chord — this small change dramatically darkens the sound. For fuller texture, double the root at the octave.
i – VII – VI – VII (Natural minor loop)i – iv – VII – III (Minor epic)i – VI – III – VII (Cinematic minor)vi – IV – I – V (Borrowed minor in major key)Connect your MIDI keyboard and play this chord — ChordBeam identifies it instantly