Accessible Page: F13(#11) Guitar Chord Chart | F Dominant Thirteen Sharp Eleventh

Chord Diagrams in Text Format For Blind and Visually Impaired People

This page provides an accessible, text-only version of the F 13(#11) guitar chord, designed for use with screen-reader software.

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F 13(#11) Description

Welcome to our tutorial on the F 13(#11) chord, a complex and rich sounding chord that belongs to the Dominant Chords family. This chord is composed of the notes F, A, C, Eb, G, B, and D, making it a seven-note chord. The intervals that build this chord are 1, 3, 5, b7, 9, #11, and 13, which in complete terms are known as the Root, Major Third, Perfect Fifth, Minor Seventh, Major Ninth, Augmented Fourth, and Major Thirteenth respectively.

The F 13(#11) chord is a colorful and expressive chord often used in jazz and fusion genres for its distinct sound. Understanding how to build and play this chord can greatly enhance your chord vocabulary and overall guitar skills. You can learn more about this in our tutorial on building chords by stacking intervals.

In this tutorial, we will guide you through how to play the F 13(#11) chord with chord diagrams and fretboard patterns, showing the tones composing the chord. If you are not familiar with these concepts, you might want to check our tutorial about fretboard intervals and our tutorial on how to denote chords depending on the intervals that compose it.

As a member of the Dominant Chords family, the F 13(#11) chord is a more advanced chord that can add depth and complexity to your playing. If you are interested in learning more about dominant chords, you can check out our tutorial about dominant (7) guitar chords.

Stay tuned for more lessons and tutorials on more advanced chords and jazz chord progressions. Happy playing!

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