Figured Bass Calculator: Decode Chord Symbols Instantly

🎼 Figured Bass Calculator

Decode figured bass notation — identify chords, inversions & intervals above any bass note

⚡ Quick Presets
🎵 Enter Figured Bass Notation
📋 Figured Bass Analysis
📊 Common Figured Bass Symbols
5/3
Root Position Triad
6
1st Inversion Triad
6/4
2nd Inversion Triad
7
Root Position 7th
6/5
1st Inversion 7th
4/3
2nd Inversion 7th
4/2
3rd Inversion 7th
°7
Fully Dim 7th
📐 Figured Bass Intervals Reference
Symbol Inversion Intervals Above Bass Chord Members Notes (C bass, C major)
5/3Root Position3rd + 5thRoot, 3rd, 5thC–E–G
6 or 6/31st Inversion3rd + 6th3rd, 5th, RootE–G–C (bass=E)
6/42nd Inversion4th + 6th5th, Root, 3rdG–C–E (bass=G)
7Root Position 7th3rd + 5th + 7thRoot, 3rd, 5th, 7thC–E–G–B
6/51st Inversion 7th3rd + 5th + 6th3rd, 5th, 7th, RootE–G–B–C (bass=E)
4/32nd Inversion 7th3rd + 4th + 6th5th, 7th, Root, 3rdG–B–C–E (bass=G)
4/23rd Inversion 7th2nd + 4th + 6th7th, Root, 3rd, 5thB–C–E–G (bass=B)
°7Fully Dim 7thm3 + d5 + d7Root, m3, d5, d7B–D–F–A♭
🎹 Interval Semitone Chart
Interval Name Abbreviation Semitones Example (from C)
UnisonP10C–C
Minor 2ndm21C–D♭
Major 2ndM22C–D
Minor 3rdm33C–E♭
Major 3rdM34C–E
Perfect 4thP45C–F
TritoneA4/d56C–F♯
Perfect 5thP57C–G
Minor 6thm68C–A♭
Major 6thM69C–A
Minor 7thm710C–B♭
Major 7thM711C–B
OctaveP812C–C
📋 Roman Numeral & Figured Bass in C Major
Roman Numeral Bass Note Figure Chord Notes Function
IC5/3C–E–GTonic
I₆E6E–G–CTonic 1st Inv.
I₆₄G6/4G–C–ECadential 6/4
VG5/3G–B–DDominant
V₇G7G–B–D–FDominant 7th
V₆₅B6/5B–D–F–GDom 7th 1st Inv.
iiD5/3D–F–ASupertonic
vii°B5/3B–D–FLeading Tone
IVF5/3F–A–CSubdominant
viA5/3A–C–ESubmediant
💡 Tip 1 — Reading Figured Bass: Figures always describe intervals above the bass note, not the root. When no figure appears, assume 5/3 (root position triad). A lone "6" means 6/3 (first inversion). Accidentals written next to or below a figure apply to that specific interval.
💡 Tip 2 — The Cadential 6/4: The 6/4 chord (second inversion triad) is most commonly used as a "cadential 6/4" on scale degree 5 before a dominant chord. It resolves both the 6th down to 5th and the 4th down to 3rd, creating strong forward motion to the dominant. Always double the bass note in a 6/4 chord.

Figured Bass is a kind of musical notation, in that numbers and signs show over, under or at the deep note. They help to point out intervals, chords and single tones. A musician that plays harpsichord, organ, piano or lute can use that information to create chords above the deep line.

One also knows it as thorough bass.

What Is Figured Bass?

This method started from the baroque period of western classical music. Composers applied numerical shorthand to lead the accompanist in harmonic design. It grew from a written deep line with a series of Arab figures.

Figured Bass works somewhat differently than today’s normal signs, because instead of letters like C or E it uses numbers placed in the notation. Like this the accompanist received a bit of freedom about the playing of his part.

The figures under the deep note show the intervals, that must sound above that note. Those intervals create the triads and seventh chords, that one finds in music. If no number stands under the deep note, that points that it forms the root of a chord.

A note in the bass with “6” below shows the first inversion of a chord, that really is “6/3”, however the 3 usually one drops.

In root position one plays the chord with the root in the bottom voice. The first inversion laid the third degree in the bass. For the second inversion the fifth degree sits in the bass.

The third inversion counts only for seventh chords. Mark “6/4” points, that above the bass sounds the sixth and fourth degrees. Likewise “6/5” for the first inversion of a seventh chord really are “6/5/3”, but the 3 simply one leaves away.

Accidentals also have their role. A flat lowers the tone by a half step. A stroke through a number raises it buy a half step.

Alone accidentals without a number deal with the third degree of the chord.

For a real example, in a key without sharps or flats, B in the bass with 6 means, that the right hand plays D and G. When figures point 6 and 5, the right hand then plays D, F and G.

Figured Bass ties strongly to basso continuo, that historically was improvised accompaniment in almost every kind of baroque music, although it less commonly appears in modern music. It simply points intervals over the bass and does not name the role of the chord. The way of noting chords by means of numbers actually came before the habit of calling them as C major or C7. That system helps well for harmonic analysis, because it stresses big harmonic structures instead of every separate note.

Figured Bass forms part of a wider systemcalled partimento, that grew in the baroque era by means of hundreds of models and rules.

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