Scale Reference
A Natural Minor | Triads
The A natural minor scale with all 7 diatonic triads mapped across the fretboard. Each chord is color-coded by scale degree, making the harmonic structure of the key immediately visible.

Diatonic triads in A natural minor
A natural minor has 7 diatonic triads: Am (i), Bdim (ii°), C (III), Dm (iv), Em (v), F (VI), G (VII). These are the chords built entirely from notes in the A minor scale | any combination of these chords will sound harmonically "in key."
Progressions like Am–F–C–G and Am–G–F–E are built entirely from these triads and appear in thousands of songs across rock, pop, and classical music.
Why this matters
Seeing all 7 triads on the neck at once reveals the full harmonic landscape of the key. You stop thinking of chord shapes in isolation and start seeing how they're all pieces of the same scale system.
Explore triads interactively
Build progressions, toggle individual chords on and off, and experiment with every triad across the full neck.
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