E Power Chord

Chord Tones: E Power Chord

Symbol: 5 — Formula: 1-5

DegreeNoteFrequency (A=440, Equal)
1 E 329.628 Hz
5 B 493.883 Hz

Chord Notation

Notation TypeSymbol / Value
Lead Sheet SymbolE5
All Common Symbols5
Interval Formula1-5
Harmonic Categoryopen/neutral

Roman numeral (e.g. I, IV, V) and Nashville Number notation are key-dependent. See Keys pages for chord function within specific keys.

Inversions

InversionNotes (low to high)Bass NoteSlash Notation
Root Position E B E E Power Chord
First Inversion B E B E Power Chord/B

Harmonic Function

The E power chord commonly functions as the mediant (iii) in C major or dominant (V) in A major. Its harmonic role varies by key — in major keys it provides stable harmonic grounding.

The power chord consists of only the root and fifth, omitting the third entirely. It is neither major nor minor and sounds powerful and full, especially with distortion in rock and metal music.

Common Progressions

The E Power Chord frequently appears in these progression patterns (shown in Roman numeral notation relative to key):

Songs Featuring the Power Chord

Well-known songs where the E Power Chord — or this chord type — plays a prominent role:

Tuning Frequencies Across Temperaments

Frequencies shown at A=440 Hz. View full temperament data for any note.

NoteEqual Temp.PythagoreanJust Intonation
E 329.628 Hz 330.001 Hz 327.032 Hz
B 493.883 Hz 495.000 Hz 490.548 Hz

Scales Containing the E Power Chord

These scales include the E Power Chord as a diatonic or characteristic chord: