Ukulele chord

Asus2 Ukulele Chord

Looking for the Asus2 chord on your ukulele? It is a barre shape, which feels awkward at first but is well worth learning. Your fingers go on the g, C, E and A strings. The steps below show exactly where each one sits.

A three-finger shape. Here is how to play Asus2, step by step.

At a glance
  • Notes: A, B and E
  • Frets: 2 4 5 2
  • Tuning: g C E A
Tuning
Lefthanded

Asus2 ukulele chord details

Type
Suspended 2nd
Also known as
A suspended second
Formula
1 2 5
Intervals
A (root), B (major 2nd), E (perfect 5th)
Notes
A, B and E
Frets
2 4 5 2
Difficulty
Hard
Tuning
Standard (g C E A)

How to play the Asus2 chord

Here is the Asus2 chord step by step:

  1. Lay your index finger flat across the g and A strings at the 2nd fret, a small barre.
  2. Put your ring finger on the 4th fret of the C string.
  3. Put your little finger on the 5th fret of the E string.
  4. Strum all four strings.

Roll your index finger slightly onto its bony side so it presses every string evenly. Read how to play bar chords if it keeps buzzing. New to these grids? Have a look at how to read a ukulele chord diagram.

What notes are in the Asus2 chord?

The Asus2 chord is built from three notes: A, B and E (the root, major 2nd and perfect 5th). On the ukulele the A is doubled, so you get a nice full sound. A suspended chord swaps the third for a 2nd or a 4th, so it sounds neither happy nor sad, just open and ringing until it resolves.

Want to go further?

Once Asus2 feels comfortable, its close relatives are worth exploring: try A7, Amaj7, Am and A. Sus chords want to resolve, so Asus2 is happiest right before a plain A chord. When that feels good, work on switching between chords faster. When you are ready, try some easy ukulele songs.

All A chord variations

All chords →

Triad

Seventh

Sixth

Suspended

Ninth

Extended

Added

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