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10.2: Seventh Chord Qualities

  • Page ID
    258522
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    Seventh Chords

    With four notes to stack and use, our chord possibilities multiplied! The most common seventh chord that we use and hear is the dominant seventh chord (V7). However, there are five main types of seventh chords with which you should be familiar. Musician hands on a trumpet and saxophone further behind

    • Dominant seventh
    • Major seventh
    • Minor seventh
    • Diminished seventh
    • Half-diminished seventh

    Each of these have their own personality and sound. Like learning the qualities of triads, learning to recognize the sound of these chords will benefit our musical ear in many ways. Some of those are:

    • Dictation: if you are dictating a piece or trying to notate a solo from a recording, being able to recognize the features and qualities of seventh chords as a group of pitches will be easier than trying to hear the individual intervals one-at-a-time.
    • Teaching: you might find yourself in a situation listening to a student or an ensemble perform and an incorrect note or chord is played. Knowledge of these chords and their sound will help you identify the problem and quickly direct the student (or students) to fix it.
    • Composition: you might find yourself with a great musical idea running through your head. Being able to figure out what you are hearing and write it down in a way it can be reproduced is a valuable skill. This is also related to performance and your own soloing ideas.

    In your career, you will likely come up with even more beneficial uses for these skills!

    Attribution: Image by Ahkeem Hopkins from Pixabay


    This page titled 10.2: Seventh Chord Qualities is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.