- In
music theory, a
dominant seventh chord, or
major minor seventh chord, is a
seventh chord composed of a root,
major third,
perfect fifth, and
minor seventh;...
-
resolution of a
dominant chord to a
tonic chord. To
describe this,
Western music theory has
developed the
practice of
numbering chords using Roman numerals...
-
Using one (or more) of
these notes in a
resolving dominant chord greatly increases the bite in the
chord and
therefore the
power of the resolution. In jazz...
-
common secondary chords, the
dominant of the
dominant, is
written "V/V" and read as "five of five" or "the
dominant of the
dominant". The
major or minor...
- system, the
dominant note is sung as "So(l)". The
triad built on the
dominant note is
called the
dominant chord. This
chord is said to have
dominant function...
- In
music theory,
chord substitution is the
technique of
using a
chord in
place of
another in a
progression of
chords, or a
chord progression. Much of...
- chord's root. When not
otherwise specified, a "seventh
chord"
usually means a
dominant seventh chord: a
major triad together with a
minor seventh. However...
- In music, the
dominant 7♯9
chord ("
dominant seven sharp nine" or "
dominant seven sharp ninth") is a
chord built by
combining a
dominant seventh, which...
- structure.
Variants include the
dominant eleventh (C11, C–E–G–B♭–D–F),
minor eleventh (Cm11, C–E♭–G–B♭–D–F), and
major eleventh chord (Cmaj11, C–E–G–B–D–F). Using...
-
difference between a
major ninth chord and a
dominant ninth chord. A
dominant ninth is the
combination of a
dominant chord (with a
minor seventh) and a major...