Open G left-handed chord chart

A#maj7 Left-Handed Guitar Chord Chart

Major 7 chord voicings, mirrored lefty grip charts and standard tab references in Open G.

A#maj7 uses the notes A#, D, F, A and is shown here as a mirrored left-handed chord chart. Open G stacks a major chord under the strings, which turns left-handed rhythm and slide ideas into a much more visual game than in standard tuning. Mirrored diagrams matter here because the inner-string note placement is easy to misread when you are learning from right-handed chord books.

Open a page

Chord boxes are mirrored for left-handed guitar. Tab and low-to-high shape notation remain standard so common lessons still translate.

Formula 1 3 5 7
Tuning D B G D G D
Voicings 4 shapes
Mirror View True lefty chart

Primary Chart

Chord View

o
 
 
 
 
x
1
2
A
3
D
F
A#
4
5
D
B
G
D
G
D

Major 7 open-position chart (frets 1-5)

 
 
 
o
 
x
1
2
A
3
F
D
A#
4
5
D
B
G
D
G
D

Major 7 open-position chart (frets 1-5)

6fr
 
 
 
 
 
 
6
F
7
A
D
A
D
8
A#
9
10
D
B
G
D
G
D

Major 7 voicing around frets 6-10

14fr
 
 
 
 
 
x
14
A
15
F
D
F
A#
16
17
18
D
B
G
D
G
D

Major 7 voicing around frets 14-18

Standard Reference

Tab & Shape Readout

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 0 3 2 3 3 x
Chord tones: A# D F A

D|-0-|
B|-3-|
G|-2-|
D|-3-|
G|-3-|
D|-x-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 3 3 2 0 3 x
Chord tones: A# D F A

D|-3-|
B|-3-|
G|-2-|
D|-0-|
G|-3-|
D|-x-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 7 6 7 7 7 8
Chord tones: A# D F A

D|-7-|
B|-6-|
G|-7-|
D|-7-|
G|-7-|
D|-8-|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Standard Tab Reference

Left-handed shape (high -> low): 15 15 14 15 15 x
Chord tones: A# D F A

D|-15-|
B|-15-|
G|-14-|
D|-15-|
G|-15-|
D|-x--|

Mirrored left-handed chord box on top, stacked standard tab reference below.

Context

How To Use This Page

Overview

Major 7 feels lush, polished and sophisticated and works for neo-soul, jazz-pop, chord melody and atmospheric harmony.

Lefty Translation

Mirrored diagrams matter here because the inner-string note placement is easy to misread when you are learning from right-handed chord books.

Grip Cue

Let notes ring but do not squeeze; these voicings sound better with even pressure than brute force

Tuning Context

Open G feels rootsy, slide-friendly and chord-rich. It makes partial chords, droning harmonies and slide-friendly shapes easier to hear quickly.

Chord Tones
  • A#
  • D
  • F
  • A

Next Step

Matching Left-Handed Scales

Use these scale pages to move from the chord into lead work without leaving the same tuning and key centre.

Library

Explore More Left-Handed Resources