Embellishing the open Am7 chord
The open Am7 chord is built from 1, b3, 5, b7. An embellishment moves one of those chord tones up or down on the same string to land on a different scale degree, producing a fuller, more colourful version that still resolves cleanly back home. This page shows the safe additions, the blue notes and the riskier single-finger moves you can make from the standard Am7 shape.
All open-chord embellishments →The base Am7 shape
Here is the standard open Am7 chord with each note labelled by its scale degree. Compare this diagram against each embellishment below to see exactly which note moved on which string.
The plain Am7 shape with scale degrees labelled inside each note. Every embellishment below changes one of these notes on a single string.
Every embellishment at a glance
One map of the open Am7 position. The gold notes are the chord you are holding; every other dot is a single-finger embellishment you can reach, coloured by type. Read it as a menu: any green, blue or red note is one move away.
- Base chord (1, 3, 5)
- Safe (in scale)
- Blue note (b3, b5, b7)
- Risky (changes function)
Safe embellishments · 4
The safe extensions here are the 4. They reach up the chord's own scale for fuller, jazzier colours, or trade the third for a suspension. Each one moves a single note on a single string.
Open the D string for the 4 (the 11). Spacious and modal, the backbone of neo-soul.
Blue notes · the bluesy colours
The blue notes are the altered, bluesy tones: the #9 and #11 over a dominant, the b5 over a minor seventh. They give the chord its grit. Reach for them in passing.
Drop the D string to D#, the b5, for the half-diminished sound. A blue, unstable colour.
Risky embellishments · handle with care
These moves change the chord's character, like a major 7 or a natural 6 over a minor seventh. Use them as colour, not as a home base.
Fret the high E at the second fret for F#, the Dorian 6. Sultry and a touch jazzy; use it deliberately.
Raise the G string to G#, the major 7, for the tense, cinematic minor-major sound.
Why these moves work
The open Am7 is already a four-note chord, so its embellishments are extensions: the 9, the 11 and the 13 reach up the stack for fuller, jazzier colours, and the suspensions trade the third for the 2 or the 4. Each one still moves a single note on a single string from the minor seventh shape.
The blue notes add grit: over a dominant the #9 and the #11 are the altered, bluesy colours, and over a minor seventh the b5 gives the half-diminished sound. The risky moves change the chord's character, like the natural 6 or the major 7 over a minor chord. Used in passing they are gorgeous; parked on, they pull the song somewhere new.
How to practise
Start by gripping the standard Am7 shape and strumming four times. Then apply one embellishment at a time: hold the new shape for four strums, return to the base for four, and repeat. Get the muscle memory before you try to fit the move into a song. Once each embellishment feels easy on its own, try cycling two of them inside the same bar, for example base to add9 to base to sus4. That little four-step cycle is the engine of an enormous amount of acoustic guitar writing.
The other open chords
Every open chord, triad and seventh alike, has its own embellishment vocabulary. Pick the next one to explore.
More songwriting tools
Need to drop these chords into a progression? The interactive chord builder on the home page maps every diatonic and borrowed option in every key. Stuck on a lyric? RhymeForge finds the rhyme; CollisionLab breaks a block with unexpected word pairs.