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  2. Seventh chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventh_chord

    The most common chords are tertian, constructed using a sequence of major thirds (spanning 4 semitones) and/or minor thirds (3 semitones). Since there are 3 third intervals in a seventh chord (4 notes) and each can be major or minor, there are 7 possible permutations (the 8th one, consisted of four major thirds, results in a non-seventh augmented chord, since a major third equally divides the ...

  3. Guitar chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar_chord

    An illustration shows a naive C7 chord, which would be extremely difficult to play, [50] besides the open-position C7 chord that is conventional in standard tuning. [ 50 ] [ h ] The standard-tuning implementation of a C7 chord is a second-inversion C7 drop 2 chord, in which the second highest note in a second inversion of the C7 chord is ...

  4. Harmonic seventh chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_seventh_chord

    A chord consisting of the root, third, fifth, and flatted seventh degrees of the scale. It is characteristic of barbershop arrangements. When used to lead to a chord whose root is a fifth below the root of the barbershop seventh chord, it is called a dominant seventh chord. Barbershoppers sometimes refer to this as the 'meat 'n' taters chord'.

  5. Augmented seventh chord - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augmented_seventh_chord

    The augmented minor seventh chord may be considered an altered dominant seventh and may use the whole tone scale, as may the dominant seventh flat five chord. [7] See chord-scale system. The augmented seventh chord normally acts as a dominant, resolving to the chord a fifth below. [8] Thus, G aug 7 resolves to a C major or minor chord, for example.

  6. Harmonic minor scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonic_minor_scale

    Traditionally, "the main use for harmonic minor, when improvising or creating melodies, is over the V7 chord, not for use over the i chord." [8] For example, in the key of A minor, the dominant (V) chord (the triad built on the 5th scale degree, E) is a minor triad in the natural minor scale.

  7. Tritone substitution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tritone_substitution

    C7 is transpositionally equivalent to the F ♯ 7, the leading tones resolve inversionally (E-B ♭ resolves to F-A, A ♯-E resolves to B-D ♯) Play F-C7-F, F-F ♯ 7-F, B-F ♯ 7-B, then B-C7-B ⓘ The tritone substitution is a common chord substitution found in both jazz and classical music.