Am(maj7)

A Minor-Major 7th — a minor triad under a natural seventh — dramatic, cinematic, and instantly recognisable.

The keys
C4C5C6
A – C – E – G♯
What's inside Am(maj7)
NoteInterval from rootDegree
ARoot1
CMinor 3rdb3
EPerfect 5th5
G♯Major 7th7
Inversions
PositionKeys (low → high)
Root positionA4 – C5 – E5 – A♭5
1st inversionC5 – E5 – A♭5 – A5
2nd inversionE5 – A♭5 – A5 – C6
3rd inversionA♭5 – A5 – C6 – E6
A working voicing

Split the chord between two hands the way working players do — a solid shell low down, the colour tones up top:

HandKeys
Left (shell)A2 – A♭3
Right (colour)C5 – E5
Where Am(maj7) lives

As the ii chord

Am(maj7) → D7 → Gmaj7

Minor-family sevenths live on the ii — this is the move they were born for.

Stepwise colour

A → Am(maj7) → Bm7

Used as a passing colour between neighbouring chords.

Put Am(maj7) under your fingers

Hear every voicing, see the keys light up, and drill it in the interactive Chord & Voicing Lab.

Open the Chord & Voicing Lab →