C# Diminished Seventh Ukulele Arpeggio
Ukulele arpeggio — fretboard diagram
C# Diminished Seventh Arpeggio — Notes and Intervals
Notes: C#, E, G, Bb
Intervals: 1P, 3m, 5d, 7d
Formula: WH-WH-WH
Number of notes: 4
Also known as: dim7, °7, o7
The C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio contains 4 notes (C#, E, G, Bb). Use the interactive fretboard above to explore this arpeggio on Ukulele with different tunings and fret ranges.
When to Use the C# Diminished Seventh Arpeggio
Play the C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio whenever a C# Diminished Seventh chord appears in a progression. Unlike scales (which include passing tones), arpeggios guarantee every note you play IS a chord tone, making your solo sound harmonically precise and intentional.
Arpeggio vs. Scale
The C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio uses 4 notes (C#, E, G, Bb) while the full scale uses 7. The arpeggio is a subset — think of it as the skeleton of the scale. Practice alternating between the arpeggio and the full scale to develop a melodic vocabulary that mixes chord tones with passing tones.
How to Play C# Diminished Seventh Arpeggio on Ukulele
On ukulele, find C# around the open strings and play through the arpeggio tones (C#, E, G, Bb). You may need to move beyond a single chord shape to reach all 4 notes. Practice connecting the arpeggio tones smoothly across adjacent fret positions.
The C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio creates a tense, unstable sound built from minor thirds. It works over C#dim, C#dim7, C#m7b5 chords and is often used as a passing device to create dramatic tension before resolving to a stable chord.
Practice Routine
Start by playing the C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio ascending and descending at 60 BPM, one note per beat, using a metronome. Once even and confident, play it in eighth notes, then triplets, keeping each note articulate. Spend at least 5 minutes daily on this before moving to musical application.
Ukulele Tips
The ukulele's re-entrant tuning creates natural voice leading within the C# Diminished Seventh arpeggio. Experiment with picking patterns that take advantage of the high G string to create unexpected interval leaps within the arpeggio shape.