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A seventh chord is a chord or triad which has a note the seventh above the tonic in it. In its earliest usage, the seventh was
introduced solely as an embellishing or nonchord tone. The seventh destabilized the triad, and allowed the composer to emphasize movement in a
given direction. As time progressed and the collective ears of the western world became more accustomed to dissonance, the seventh was allowed to become a part of the chord itself, and in some
modern music, and jazz in particular, nearly every chord is a seventh chord. The next natural step in composing tertian chords is to add the note a third above the fifth of the chord, or the seventh of the
chord.
Because a variety of sevenths may be added to a variety of chords, there are many types of seventh chords, depending on the
type of triad and the quality of the seventh.
Types of Seventh Chords
- dominant or major-minor seventh (7, Mm7)
- minor seventh or minor-minor seventh (m7)
- major seventh or major-major seventh (maj7, M7, Δ7)
- minor-major seventh (m/maj7, m/M7)
- diminished seventh or diminished-diminished seventh (°7)
- half-diminished seventh or diminished-minor seventh (ø7, m7b5)
Augmented seventh chords are extremely rare, as are seventh chords caused by the variable sixth and seventh degrees of a
minor scale.
The dominant seventh
Of all the seventh chords, perhaps the most important to understand is the dominant seventh chord. Called the Dominant Seventh
because its intervallic relationships occur naturally in the seventh chord built on the dominant scale degree of a given key, the
dominant seventh chord was the first to begin to appear regularly in Western music.
The dominant seventh chord is useful to composers because of the fact that it is a major chord with a very strong sound, that
also includes a tritone between the third and seventh of the chord. In a diatonic
context, the third of the chord is the leading-tone of the scale, which has
a strong tendency to pull towards the tonal center, or root note, of the key. This, in combination with the strength of root movement by fifth, and the natural resolution of the dominant triad to the
tonic triad, creates an incredibly satisfying resolution with which to end a piece. Because of this original usage, it also
quickly became an easy way to trick the listeners ear with a deceptive cadence.
The most important usage, though, is the way that the introduction of a non-diatonic dominant seventh chord which is borrowed
from another key, can allow the composer to modulate to that other
key.
This technique is extremely common, particularly since the classical period, and has led to further innovative uses of the
dominant seventh chord such as secondary dominant, extended dominant, and substitute dominant chords.
Major and Minor Seventh Chords
While the dominant seventh chord is typically built on the fifth (or dominant) degree of a major scale, the minor seventh
chord is built on the second, third, or sixth degree. A minor seventh chord contains the same notes as an added sixth chord (see
below under "Sixth chords") - for example, C-Eb-G-Bb can function as both a C minor seventh and an E flat added sixth.
Major seventh chords are usually constructed on the first or fourth degree of a scale. Due to the minor second interval, this
chord can sometimes sound a bit dissonant, depending on the voicing used.
Half-Diminished Seventh Chords
A half-diminished seventh chord is a seventh chord built from the seventh degree of a major scale. It's considered
"half-diminished" because a true diminished seventh is double-flatted, making it the same as a major sixth. The half-diminished
seventh chord uses a dominant seventh over a diminished triad.
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