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Dominant seventh chord

In music theory, a dominant seventh chord, or major minor seventh chord,[a] is a seventh chord, composed of a root, major third, perfect fifth, and minor seventh. Thus it is a major triad together with a minor seventh, denoted by the letter name of the chord root and a superscript "7".[3] In most[citation needed] cases, dominant seventh chord are built on the fifth degree of the major scale. An example is the dominant seventh chord built on G, written as G7, having pitches G–B–D–F:

dominant seventh chord
Component intervals from root
minor seventh
perfect fifth
major third
root
Tuning
4:5:6:7,[1] 20:25:30:36,[2] or 36:45:54:64[2]
Forte no. / Complement
4-27 / 8-27

It's important to notice that the leading note and the subdominant note combined form a diminished fifth (tritone). The clashing sounds produced by playing these two notes together gives the dominant seventh chord its dissonant quality (i.e, lack of harmony, or it's instability).[4]

Dominant seventh chords are often built on the fifth scale degree (or dominant) of a key. For instance, in the C major scale, G is the fifth note of the scale, and the seventh chord built on G is the dominant seventh chord, G7 (shown above). In this chord, F is a minor seventh above G. In Roman numeral analysis, G7 would be represented as V7 in the key of C major.

Similarly, this chord also occurs on the seventh degree of any natural minor scale (e.g., G7 in A minor).

The dominant seventh is perhaps the most important of the seventh chords. It was the first seventh chord to appear regularly in classical music. The V7 chord is found almost as often as the V, the dominant triad,[5] and typically functions to drive the piece strongly toward a resolution to the tonic of the key.

A dominant seventh chord can be represented by the integer notation {0, 4, 7, 10} relative to the dominant.

History edit

The majority of Renaissance composers conceived of harmony in terms of intervals rather than chords, "however, certain dissonant sonorities suggest that the dominant seventh chord occurred with some frequency."[6] Monteverdi (usually credited as the first to use the V7 chord without preparation[7]) and other early Baroque composers begin to treat the V7 as a chord as part of the introduction of functional harmony.

An excerpt from Monteverdi's "Lasciatemi Morire", Lamento d'Arianna (1608) is shown below. In it, a dominant seventh chord (in red) is handled conservatively, "prepared and resolved as a suspension, clearly indicating its dissonant status."[6]

 

The V7 was in constant use during the Classical period, with similar treatment to that of the Baroque. In the Romantic period, freer voice-leading was gradually developed, leading to the waning of functional use in the post-Romantic and Impressionistic periods including more dissonant dominant chords through higher extensions and lessened use of the major minor chord's dominant function. Twentieth-century classical music either consciously used functional harmony or was entirely free of V7 chords while jazz and popular musics continued to use functional harmony including V7 chords.[6]

An excerpt from Chopin's Mazurka in F minor (1849), Op. 68, No. 4, mm. 1–4 is shown below with dominant sevenths in red: "the seventh factor had by this time achieved nearly consonant status."[6]

 

Use edit

Inversions edit

Inversion Bottom note Roman numerals Macro analysis
Root position root: 5 V7 in C: G7
First 3rd: 7 V6
5
in C: G6
5
Second 5th: 2 V4
3
in C: G4
3
Third 7th: 4 V4
2
or V2
in C: G4
2
or G2
Inversions of the Dominant Seventh Chord
 
Inversions of the Dominant Seventh Chord

The opening bars of Mozart’s Piano Sonata in C, K545 features dominant seventh chords in both second and first inversions:

Mozart Piano Sonata in C , K545 opening bars
 
Mozart Piano Sonata in C , K545 opening bars 02

The concluding cadence of the same movement features the chord in root position:

Mozart Piano Sonata in C, K545, end of first movement
 
Mozart Piano Sonata in C, K545, end of first movement 02

A striking use of inversions of the dominant seventh can be found in this passage from the first movement of Beethoven’s String Quartet Op. 127. Here, the second and third inversions contribute to the "magnificently rich harmony" [8]:

Beethoven Quartet Op. 127 first movement, bars 135–139
 
Beethoven Quartet Op. 127 first movement, bars 135–139

Function edit

 
Tritone resolutions in the last measures of Beethoven's Piano Sonata in B major, Op. 22 (1800).[9]

The function of the dominant seventh chord is to resolve to the tonic note or chord.

... the demand of the V7 for resolution is, to our ears, almost inescapably compelling. The dominant seventh is, in fact, the central propulsive force in our music; it is unambiguous and unequivocal.

— Goldman, 1965: 35[10]

This dominant seventh chord is useful to composers because it contains both a major triad and the interval of a tritone. The major triad confers a very "strong" sound. The tritone is created by the co-occurrence of the third degree and seventh degree (e.g., in the G7 chord, the interval between B and F is a tritone).

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 tonic of the key (e.g., in C, the third of G7, B, is the leading tone of the key of C). The seventh of the chord acts as an upper leading-tone to the third of the scale (in C: the seventh of G7, 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), creates a resolution with which to end a piece or a section, often in a cadence.

 

Because of this original usage, it also quickly became an easy way to trick the listener's ear with a deceptive cadence. The dominant seventh may work as part of a circle progression, preceded by the supertonic chord, ii.

Importantly, non-diatonic dominant seventh chords (sometimes called a chromatic seventh), 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 (V7/V, shown below), extended dominant (V7/V/V), and substitute dominant (V7/V) chords.

 

Voice leading edit

For common practice voice leading or "strict resolution" of the dominant seventh chord:[11]

  • In the V7–I resolution, the dominant, leading note, and supertonic resolve to the tonic, whereas the subdominant resolves to the mediant.
     
  • In the other resolutions, the dominant remains stationary, the leading note and supertonic resolve to the tonic, and the subdominant resolves to the mediant.
     
  • All four tones may be present, though the root may be doubled and the fifth omitted.[11][12][13]
  • The diminished fifth (if the seventh is above the third, as in the first measure below) resolves inwards while the augmented fourth (if the seventh is below the third, as in the second measure below) resolves outward. This means that the seventh resolves stepwise downwards[12][13] while the third resolves upwards to the tonic[11] though in such cases the root of the tonic chord may need to be tripled.[12]
     
  • The root of the V7, when in the bass, resolves to the root of the I, in the bass.[11]
  • In an incomplete V7, with a missing fifth, the doubled root remains stationary.[11]
  • The "free resolution of the seventh" features the seventh in an inner voice moving stepwise upwards to the fifth of I[11]

According to Heinrich Schenker, "The dissonance is always passing, never a chord member (Zusammenklang),'"[14] and often (though by no means always) the voice leading suggests either a passing note:

8 7 3
5 5 1[further explanation needed]

or resolution of a (hypothetical) suspension:

(8) 7 3
(4) 5 1

In blues progressions edit

In rock and popular music songs following the blues progression, the IV and V chords are "almost always" dominant seventh chords (sometimes with extensions) with the tonic chord most often being a major triad. Examples include Bill Haley and the Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" and Buster Brown's "Fanny Mae", while in Chuck Berry's "Back in the U.S.A." and Loggins and Messina's "Your Mama Don't Dance" the tonic chord is also a dominant seventh.[15] Used mostly in the first fifteen years of the rock era and now sounding somewhat "retrospective" (e.g., Oasis' "Roll With It"), other examples of tonic dominant seventh chords include Little Richard's "Lucille", The Beatles' "I Saw Her Standing There", Nilsson's "Coconut", Jim Croce's "You Don't Mess Around With Jim", and The Drifters' "On Broadway".[15] Chuck Berry's "Rock and Roll Music" uses the dominant seventh on I, IV, and V.[16]

Related chords edit

The dominant seventh is enharmonically equivalent to the German sixth. For example, the German sixth A–C–E–F (which typically resolves to G) is equivalent to the dominant seventh A–C–E–G (which typically resolves to D):

 
 
Just harmonic seventh chord on C. 7th: 968.826 cents, a septimal quarter tone lower than B.

The dominant seventh chord is frequently used to approximate a harmonic seventh chord, which is one possible just tuning, in the ratios 4:5:6:7[1] Play, for the dominant seventh. Others include 20:25:30:36 Play, found on I, and 36:45:54:64, found on V, used in 5-limit just tunings and scales.[2]

Today, the dominant seventh chord enjoys particular prominence in the music of barbershop quartets, with the Barbershop Harmony Society describing the chord as the "signature" of the barbershop sound. A song may use the chord type (built on any scale degree, not just  ), for up to 30 percent of its duration.[17] As barbershop singers strive to harmonize in just intonation to maximize the audibility of harmonic overtones, the practical sonority of the chord tends to be that of a harmonic seventh chord. This chord type has become so ingrained into the fabric of the artform that it is often referred to as the "barbershop seventh chord" by those who practice it.[18][19]

Tuning edit

Chord Notation Seventh Ratios
Tonic seventh chord C E G B Minor seventh 20:25:30:36[20][2]
Harmonic seventh chord G B D F + Harmonic seventh 4:5:6:7[1]
German sixth chord A C E G  Harmonic seventh 4:5:6:7
Dominant seventh chord G B D F Pythagorean minor seventh 36:45:54:64[2]

Dominant seventh chord table edit

Chord Root Major third Perfect fifth Minor seventh
C7 C E G B
C7 C E (F) G B
D7 D F A C (B)
D7 D F A C
D7 D F  (G) A C
E7 E G B D
E7 E G B D
F7 F A C E
F7 F A C E
G7 G B D F (E)
G7 G B D F
G7 G B (C) D F
A7 A C E G
A7 A C E G
A7 A C  (D) E (F) G
B7 B D F A
B7 B D F A

Guitar chord diagrams edit

In standard tuning, the left is the low E string. x means mute the string.[21][22]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also written major-minor seventh chord.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Benitez, J. M. (1988). Contemporary Music Review: Listening 2, p. 34. ISBN 3-7186-4846-6. Cites Euler (1764).
  2. ^ a b c d e Wright, David (2009). Mathematics and Music, pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-0-8218-4873-9.
  3. ^ Bruce Benward & Marilyn Nadine Saker (2003). Music in Theory and Practice, seventh edition (Boston: McGraw-Hill), vol. 1: p. 77. ISBN 978-0-07-294262-0.
  4. ^ "What is Dominant and Diminished Seventh Chords?". Liberty Park Music. 2017-10-03. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  5. ^ Benward & Saker (2003), vol. 1: p. 199.
  6. ^ a b c d Benward & Saker (2003), vol. 1: p. 201.
  7. ^ Goldman (1965), p. 39.
  8. ^ Radcliffe, P. (1965, p. 99) Beethoven's String Quartets. London, Hutchinson.
  9. ^ Forte, Allen (1979). Tonal Harmony in Concept & Practice, p. 145. Third edition. ISBN 0-03-020756-8.
  10. ^ a b Goldman, Richard Franco (1965), Harmony in Western Music (London: Barrie and Rockliff), pp. 34–35. ISBN 978-0-214-66680-3.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Benjamin, Horvit, and Nelson (2008). Techniques and Materials of Music, pp. 46–47. ISBN 0-495-50054-2.
  12. ^ a b c Benward & Saker (2003), vol. 1: pp. 202–204.
  13. ^ a b Benward & Saker (2008), vol. 2: p. 343
  14. ^ Schenker, Heinrich. Jahrbuch II, p. 24 cited in Jonas, Oswald (1982). Introduction to the Theory of Heinrich Schenker (1934: Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerks: Eine Einführung in Die Lehre Heinrich Schenkers), p. 20. Translator: John Rothgeb. ISBN 0-582-28227-6.
  15. ^ a b Stephenson, Ken (2002). What to Listen for in Rock: A Stylistic Analysis, p. 82. ISBN 978-0-300-09239-4.
  16. ^ Stephenson (2002), p. 75.
  17. ^ Rose, Amy (February 2, 2017). "Intro to Barbershop: What is Barbershop?", BarberShop.org.
  18. ^ . dictionary.onmusic.org. Archived from the original on 2024-01-13. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  19. ^ . Intro to Barbershop: What is Barbershop? | Barbershop Harmony Society. Archived from the original on 2024-01-13. Retrieved 2024-01-13.
  20. ^ Shirlaw, Matthew (1900). The Theory of Harmony, p. 86. ISBN 978-1-4510-1534-8.
  21. ^ "Chord calculator", JGuitar.com.
  22. ^ Guitar Chord Name Finder, Gootar.com.

External links edit

  • Dominant Chords Theory and applications for jazz guitar

dominant, seventh, chord, music, theory, dominant, seventh, chord, major, minor, seventh, chord, seventh, chord, composed, root, major, third, perfect, fifth, minor, seventh, thus, major, triad, together, with, minor, seventh, denoted, letter, name, chord, roo. In music theory a dominant seventh chord or major minor seventh chord a is a seventh chord composed of a root major third perfect fifth and minor seventh Thus it is a major triad together with a minor seventh denoted by the letter name of the chord root and a superscript 7 3 In most citation needed cases dominant seventh chord are built on the fifth degree of the major scale An example is the dominant seventh chord built on G written as G7 having pitches G B D F dominant seventh chordComponent intervals from rootminor seventhperfect fifthmajor thirdrootTuning4 5 6 7 1 20 25 30 36 2 or 36 45 54 64 2 Forte no wbr Complement4 27 wbr 8 27 source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file It s important to notice that the leading note and the subdominant note combined form a diminished fifth tritone The clashing sounds produced by playing these two notes together gives the dominant seventh chord its dissonant quality i e lack of harmony or it s instability 4 Dominant seventh chords are often built on the fifth scale degree or dominant of a key For instance in the C major scale G is the fifth note of the scale and the seventh chord built on G is the dominant seventh chord G7 shown above In this chord F is a minor seventh above G In Roman numeral analysis G7 would be represented as V7 in the key of C major Similarly this chord also occurs on the seventh degree of any natural minor scale e g G7 in A minor The dominant seventh is perhaps the most important of the seventh chords It was the first seventh chord to appear regularly in classical music The V7 chord is found almost as often as the V the dominant triad 5 and typically functions to drive the piece strongly toward a resolution to the tonic of the key A dominant seventh chord can be represented by the integer notation 0 4 7 10 relative to the dominant Contents 1 History 2 Use 2 1 Inversions 2 2 Function 2 3 Voice leading 2 4 In blues progressions 3 Related chords 4 Tuning 5 Dominant seventh chord table 6 Guitar chord diagrams 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe majority of Renaissance composers conceived of harmony in terms of intervals rather than chords however certain dissonant sonorities suggest that the dominant seventh chord occurred with some frequency 6 Monteverdi usually credited as the first to use the V7 chord without preparation 7 and other early Baroque composers begin to treat the V7 as a chord as part of the introduction of functional harmony An excerpt from Monteverdi s Lasciatemi Morire Lamento d Arianna 1608 is shown below In it a dominant seventh chord in red is handled conservatively prepared and resolved as a suspension clearly indicating its dissonant status 6 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The V7 was in constant use during the Classical period with similar treatment to that of the Baroque In the Romantic period freer voice leading was gradually developed leading to the waning of functional use in the post Romantic and Impressionistic periods including more dissonant dominant chords through higher extensions and lessened use of the major minor chord s dominant function Twentieth century classical music either consciously used functional harmony or was entirely free of V7 chords while jazz and popular musics continued to use functional harmony including V7 chords 6 An excerpt from Chopin s Mazurka in F minor 1849 Op 68 No 4 mm 1 4 is shown below with dominant sevenths in red the seventh factor had by this time achieved nearly consonant status 6 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Use editInversions edit Inversion Bottom note Roman numerals Macro analysisRoot position root 5 V7 in C G7First 3rd 7 V65 in C G65Second 5th 2 V43 in C G43Third 7th 4 V42 or V2 in C G42 or G2 source source source Inversions of the Dominant Seventh Chord nbsp Inversions of the Dominant Seventh ChordThe opening bars of Mozart s Piano Sonata in C K545 features dominant seventh chords in both second and first inversions source source source Mozart Piano Sonata in C K545 opening bars nbsp Mozart Piano Sonata in C K545 opening bars 02The concluding cadence of the same movement features the chord in root position source source source Mozart Piano Sonata in C K545 end of first movement nbsp Mozart Piano Sonata in C K545 end of first movement 02A striking use of inversions of the dominant seventh can be found in this passage from the first movement of Beethoven s String Quartet Op 127 Here the second and third inversions contribute to the magnificently rich harmony 8 source source source Beethoven Quartet Op 127 first movement bars 135 139 nbsp Beethoven Quartet Op 127 first movement bars 135 139Function edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Tritone resolutions in the last measures of Beethoven s Piano Sonata in B major Op 22 1800 9 The function of the dominant seventh chord is to resolve to the tonic note or chord the demand of the V7 for resolution is to our ears almost inescapably compelling The dominant seventh is in fact the central propulsive force in our music it is unambiguous and unequivocal Goldman 1965 35 10 This dominant seventh chord is useful to composers because it contains both a major triad and the interval of a tritone The major triad confers a very strong sound The tritone is created by the co occurrence of the third degree and seventh degree e g in the G7 chord the interval between B and F is a tritone 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 tonic of the key e g in C the third of G7 B is the leading tone of the key of C The seventh of the chord acts as an upper leading tone to the third of the scale in C the seventh of G7 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 creates a resolution with which to end a piece or a section often in a cadence nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Because of this original usage it also quickly became an easy way to trick the listener s ear with a deceptive cadence The dominant seventh may work as part of a circle progression preceded by the supertonic chord ii Importantly non diatonic dominant seventh chords sometimes called a chromatic seventh 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 V7 V shown below extended dominant V7 V V and substitute dominant V7 V chords nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Voice leading edit For common practice voice leading or strict resolution of the dominant seventh chord 11 In the V7 I resolution the dominant leading note and supertonic resolve to the tonic whereas the subdominant resolves to the mediant nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In the other resolutions the dominant remains stationary the leading note and supertonic resolve to the tonic and the subdominant resolves to the mediant nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file All four tones may be present though the root may be doubled and the fifth omitted 11 12 13 The diminished fifth if the seventh is above the third as in the first measure below resolves inwards while the augmented fourth if the seventh is below the third as in the second measure below resolves outward This means that the seventh resolves stepwise downwards 12 13 while the third resolves upwards to the tonic 11 though in such cases the root of the tonic chord may need to be tripled 12 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The root of the V7 when in the bass resolves to the root of the I in the bass 11 In an incomplete V7 with a missing fifth the doubled root remains stationary 11 The free resolution of the seventh features the seventh in an inner voice moving stepwise upwards to the fifth of I 11 According to Heinrich Schenker The dissonance is always passing never a chord member Zusammenklang 14 and often though by no means always the voice leading suggests either a passing note 8 7 3 5 5 1 further explanation needed or resolution of a hypothetical suspension 8 7 3 4 5 1In blues progressions edit In rock and popular music songs following the blues progression the IV and V chords are almost always dominant seventh chords sometimes with extensions with the tonic chord most often being a major triad Examples include Bill Haley and the Comets Rock Around the Clock and Buster Brown s Fanny Mae while in Chuck Berry s Back in the U S A and Loggins and Messina s Your Mama Don t Dance the tonic chord is also a dominant seventh 15 Used mostly in the first fifteen years of the rock era and now sounding somewhat retrospective e g Oasis Roll With It other examples of tonic dominant seventh chords include Little Richard s Lucille The Beatles I Saw Her Standing There Nilsson s Coconut Jim Croce s You Don t Mess Around With Jim and The Drifters On Broadway 15 Chuck Berry s Rock and Roll Music uses the dominant seventh on I IV and V 16 Related chords editThe dominant seventh is enharmonically equivalent to the German sixth For example the German sixth A C E F which typically resolves to G is equivalent to the dominant seventh A C E G which typically resolves to D nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file nbsp Just harmonic seventh chord on C 7th 968 826 cents a septimal quarter tone lower than B source source source The dominant seventh chord is frequently used to approximate a harmonic seventh chord which is one possible just tuning in the ratios 4 5 6 7 1 Play for the dominant seventh Others include 20 25 30 36 Play found on I and 36 45 54 64 found on V used in 5 limit just tunings and scales 2 Today the dominant seventh chord enjoys particular prominence in the music of barbershop quartets with the Barbershop Harmony Society describing the chord as the signature of the barbershop sound A song may use the chord type built on any scale degree not just nbsp for up to 30 percent of its duration 17 As barbershop singers strive to harmonize in just intonation to maximize the audibility of harmonic overtones the practical sonority of the chord tends to be that of a harmonic seventh chord This chord type has become so ingrained into the fabric of the artform that it is often referred to as the barbershop seventh chord by those who practice it 18 19 Tuning editChord Notation Seventh RatiosTonic seventh chord C E G B Minor seventh 20 25 30 36 20 2 Harmonic seventh chord G B D F nbsp Harmonic seventh 4 5 6 7 1 German sixth chord A C E G nbsp Harmonic seventh 4 5 6 7Dominant seventh chord G B D F Pythagorean minor seventh 36 45 54 64 2 Dominant seventh chord table editChord Root Major third Perfect fifth Minor seventhC7 C E G B C 7 C E F G BD 7 D F A C B D7 D F A CD 7 D F nbsp G A C E 7 E G B D E7 E G B DF7 F A C E F 7 F A C EG 7 G B D F E G7 G B D FG 7 G B C D F A 7 A C E G A7 A C E GA 7 A C nbsp D E F G B 7 B D F A B7 B D F AGuitar chord diagrams editIn standard tuning the left is the low E string x means mute the string 21 22 Dominant 7 A7 x02020 B7 x21202 C7 x3231x D7 xx0212 E7 020100 F7 131211 G7 320001 Dominant 7 Sus2 A7sus2 x02000 B7sus2 x24222 C7sus2 x30333 D7sus2 x57555 E7sus2 x79777 F7sus2 xx3543 G7sus2 303033 Dominant 7 Sus4 A7sus4 x00030 B7sus4 x24252 C7sus4 x35363 D7sus4 xx0013 E7sus4 020200 F7sus4 111311 G7sus4 330011See also editDominant ninth etc Irregular resolution Nondominant seventh chord Subtonic Mixolydian modeNotes edit Also written major minor seventh chord References edit a b c Benitez J M 1988 Contemporary Music Review Listening 2 p 34 ISBN 3 7186 4846 6 Cites Euler 1764 a b c d e Wright David 2009 Mathematics and Music pp 140 141 ISBN 978 0 8218 4873 9 Bruce Benward amp Marilyn Nadine Saker 2003 Music in Theory and Practice seventh edition Boston McGraw Hill vol 1 p 77 ISBN 978 0 07 294262 0 What is Dominant and Diminished Seventh Chords Liberty Park Music 2017 10 03 Retrieved 2024 01 30 Benward amp Saker 2003 vol 1 p 199 a b c d Benward amp Saker 2003 vol 1 p 201 Goldman 1965 p 39 Radcliffe P 1965 p 99 Beethoven s String Quartets London Hutchinson Forte Allen 1979 Tonal Harmony in Concept amp Practice p 145 Third edition ISBN 0 03 020756 8 a b Goldman Richard Franco 1965 Harmony in Western Music London Barrie and Rockliff pp 34 35 ISBN 978 0 214 66680 3 a b c d e f Benjamin Horvit and Nelson 2008 Techniques and Materials of Music pp 46 47 ISBN 0 495 50054 2 a b c Benward amp Saker 2003 vol 1 pp 202 204 a b Benward amp Saker 2008 vol 2 p 343 Schenker Heinrich Jahrbuch II p 24 cited in Jonas Oswald 1982 Introduction to the Theory of Heinrich Schenker 1934 Das Wesen des musikalischen Kunstwerks Eine Einfuhrung in Die Lehre Heinrich Schenkers p 20 Translator John Rothgeb ISBN 0 582 28227 6 a b Stephenson Ken 2002 What to Listen for in Rock A Stylistic Analysis p 82 ISBN 978 0 300 09239 4 Stephenson 2002 p 75 Rose Amy February 2 2017 Intro to Barbershop What is Barbershop BarberShop org OnMusic Dictionary Term dictionary onmusic org Archived from the original on 2024 01 13 Retrieved 2024 01 13 Intro to Barbershop What is Barbershop Intro to Barbershop What is Barbershop Barbershop Harmony Society Archived from the original on 2024 01 13 Retrieved 2024 01 13 Shirlaw Matthew 1900 The Theory of Harmony p 86 ISBN 978 1 4510 1534 8 Chord calculator JGuitar com Guitar Chord Name Finder Gootar com External links editDominant Chords Theory and applications for jazz guitar nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dominant seventh chord Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dominant seventh chord amp oldid 1201000513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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