Dominant seventh chord: Difference between revisions

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== See also ==
== See also ==
* [https://x31eq.com/dominant.html Well Tuned Dominant Sevenths]
* [https://x31eq.com/dominant.html ''Well Tuned Dominant Sevenths''] by [[Graham Breed]]


[[Category:Dominant seventh chords| ]] <!-- main article -->
[[Category:Dominant seventh chords| ]] <!-- main article -->
[[Category:Just intonation chords]]
[[Category:Just intonation chords]]

Revision as of 20:33, 12 August 2024

English Wikipedia has an article on:

A dominant seventh chord is a tetrad comprising a root, a major third, a fifth, and a minor seventh.

The name of the chord derives from the dominant[1] scale degree, which is the only degree of a diatonic scale on which it is found. However, in many musical genres, “dominant seventh chord” informally refers to any chord with this general structure, regardless of where it appears in the overall scale.

JI Tunings

In the 3-limit:

  • 576:729:864:1024, the Pythagorean dominant seventh chord, is found on the dominant scale degree (V or 32) of the Pythagorean diatonic scale.

In the 5-limit:

  • 36:45:54:64, the Ptolemaic dominant seventh chord, is found on the dominant scale degree (V or 32) of Ptolemy's intense diatonic scale (Zarlino), perhaps the most common 5-limit diatonic.
  • 108:135:160:192 is found on the dominant scale degree (V or 32) of a diatonic scale with the second degree tuned a comma lower than in Zarlino (10/9 instead of 9/8), such as in left-handed nicetone.

In the 7-limit:

  • 4:5:6:7, the harmonic seventh chord, is a consonant chord in the 7-limit, often used as a tuning target in barbershop music[4].

See also