Popular music Suspended chords are commonly found in
folk and
popular music.
Keith Richards makes extensive use of suspended chords in his preferred
open tuning for guitar. He found it integral to his songwriting, "I learned there is often one note doing something that makes the whole thing work. It's usually a suspended chord. It's not a full chord, it's a mixture of chords, which I love to use to this day. If you're playing a straight chord, whatever comes next should have something else in it. If it's an A chord, a hint of D. Or if it's a song with a different feeling, if it's an A chord, a hint of G should come in somewhere, which makes a 7th, which then can lead you on."
Joni Mitchell also favored suspended chords because, "so much in my life was unresolved from 'when were they going to drop the big one?' to 'where is my daughter?' that I had to use unresolved chords to convey my unresolved questions". The
Beatles' "
The Long and Winding Road" is full of "heartbreaking suspensions", according to
Ian MacDonald. "
Yes It Is" also relies on suspensions to create a "rich and unusual harmonic motion". The instrumental opening to
The Four Tops’ song "
Reach Out I'll Be There" (1966) features an E chord containing a suspended fourth, resolved immediately by being followed by an E minor chord.
Burt Bacharach's "
The Look of Love" in the arrangement performed by
Dusty Springfield (1967) opens with a clearly audible Dm7 suspension.
Pete Townshend opens "
Pinball Wizard" with a suspended four chord that resolves to the tonic. It is one of the signature motifs of
Tommy. Songs with prominent suspended chords that do not resolve include
The Police's "
Every Breath You Take",
Shocking Blue's "
Venus", and
Chicago's "
Make Me Smile".
Jazz {{Image frame|content= { \override Score.TimeSignature #'stencil = ##f \relative c' { \clef treble \time 4/4 \key c \major 1 } } |width= 250|caption=G9sus4 chord}} A common suspended chord in
jazz combines the
supertonic and
dominant chords into one sonority: V9sus4.
Red Garland ends his piano introduction to "
Bye Bye Blackbird" on the
Miles Davis album ''
'Round About Midnight'' with a series of suspended chords. Suspended chords are a common feature of
modal jazz, which emerged in the 1960s.
McCoy Tyner played them frequently.
Herbie Hancock described the structural chord of his 1965 tune "
Maiden Voyage" as "a 7th chord with the 11th on the bottom—a 7th chord with a suspended 4th". Instead of resolving the way such a tall chord would in
functional harmony, Hancock simply transposes the chord up a minor third, "It doesn't have any cadences; it just keeps moving around in a circle." ==See also==