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Minor major seventh chord. A minor major seventh chord, or minor/major seventh chord (also known as the Hitchcock Chord) is a seventh chord composed of a root, minor third, perfect fifth, and major seventh (1, ♭ 3, 5, and 7). It can be viewed as a minor triad with an additional major seventh.
For 3 triads (C, G, and F major) and the major--minor seventh chord with dominant function (G7), ascending sixteenth-notes cover the chordal notes. 10:03, 27 August 2014: No thumbnail: 0 × 0 (105 KB) Kiefer.Wolfowitz: Focus exposition on major scale on C, with its major triads and dominant sevenths, in conventional arpeggiations.
The seventh of the chord acts as an upper leading-tone to the third of the scale (in C: the seventh of G 7, F, is a half-step above and leads down to E). [10] This, in combination with the strength of root movement by fifth, and the natural resolution of the dominant triad to the tonic triad (e.g., from GBD to CEG in the key of C major ...
To analyze seventh chords indicate the quality of the triad; major: I, minor: ii, half-diminished: vii ø, or augmented: III+; and the quality of the seventh; same: 7, or different: 7 M or 7 m. [2] With chord letters used to indicate the root and chord quality, and add 7, thus a seventh chord on ii in C major (minor minor seventh) would be d 7. [1]
A leading-tone chord is a triad built on the seventh scale degree in major and the raised seventh-scale-degree in minor. The quality of the leading-tone triad is diminished in both major and minor keys. [12] For example, in both C major and C minor, it is a B diminished triad (though it is usually written in first inversion, as described below).
IV-V-I-vi chord progression in C major: 4: Major ... Major Chromatic descending 5–6 sequence: ... Minor Irregular resolution
The harmonic minor scale (or Aeolian ♮7 scale) is a musical scale derived from the natural minor scale, with the minor seventh degree raised by one semitone to a major seventh, [2] [3] [4] creating an augmented second between the sixth and seventh degrees.
Essential to Lendvai's conception of the axis system and the relationships it describes is the idea that "the particular axes should not be considered as chords of the diminished seventh, but as the functional relationships of four different tonalities, which may best be compared to the major-minor relations of classical music (e.g. C major and ...