How to Resolve a Diminished 7th Chord - Music Composition

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • This music composition lesson explains the issues involved in resolving a Diminished 7th chord. After explanation about constructing a Diminished 7th, about key referencing it, and about inversions of the chord, the video explores the two notes that need particular resolution and the implications of that for voice leading and for the choice of resolution chord. More radical treatments of Diminished 7th chords are then investigated including the use of enharmonic change and the employment of chains of Diminished 7ths.
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    🕘 Timestamps
    0:00 - Introduction to how to resolve a diminished 7th chord
    0:28 - What is a diminished 7th chord?
    2:11 - Rules for resolving a diminished 7th chord
    3:31 - Inversions
    8:11 - Key referencing diminished 7ths
    14:01 - Breaking the rules
    15:44 - Enharmonic spellings to change keys
    17:25 - Chords that often follow a diminished 7th
    17:53 - Conclusion
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Комментарии • 97

  • @MusicMattersGB
    @MusicMattersGB  2 года назад +1

    Learn Music Online - Check out our courses here!
    www.mmcourses.co.uk/courses

  • @pauldavis6857
    @pauldavis6857 Год назад

    Another vivid and crystal clear explanation, amplified by your beautiful tenor voice. Thank you!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @ParadNorthProd
    @ParadNorthProd Год назад +6

    Great technical explanation of a cool "trick" that I was already aware of. Specifically, a dim7 can resolve to one of 4 keys...each of which has its V chord exactly 1/2 step below one of the 4 notes in the chord. I now see how those 4 keys are related to the inversions of the dim7 chord. Depending on which inversion of the dim7 you use, the strength of the pull to the destination key can be felt more/less strongly.

  • @danielmads9160
    @danielmads9160 Год назад +2

    A teacher of mine told me that his teacher in composition used to say "If you're stuck, the diminished chord is your closest" which I found amusing at first, but helpful after some thought on it!

  • @ilninfeo
    @ilninfeo Год назад

    Great explanation. Thank you, Gareth

  • @charlottemacdonald4167
    @charlottemacdonald4167 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent explanation. Very clear. I will remember this.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  11 месяцев назад

      That’s great. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @jayducharme
    @jayducharme Год назад

    The "respelling" of chords is fascinating. It does indeed open up a lot of interesting possibilities.

  • @charlottemacdonald4167
    @charlottemacdonald4167 Год назад

    Thank you, Gareth. 😊🎶🎶

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @Downthebayou
    @Downthebayou 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for your videos!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  11 месяцев назад

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @robertwinfieldstabler7697
    @robertwinfieldstabler7697 Год назад

    In his book on harmony, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov said that you can resolve a fully diminished seventh chord to any major or minor chord. I have tried this and it works. :-)

  • @redsoil5821
    @redsoil5821 2 месяца назад

    You are the best, Sir!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 месяца назад

      You’re most kind. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @rjlchristie
    @rjlchristie Год назад +1

    Well summarised presentation of the fundamentals behind resolving Dim. 7ths.
    Is there any demand for a lesson on how to instead approach them with various modulation otcomes and resolutions in mind?

  • @VladiVladiG
    @VladiVladiG Год назад

    Hi Gareth. If it would delight you, please create a video explaining hidden parallel 5ths and octaves. I am trying to understand them, but I could use some clarification on this subject. Thank you.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +1

      Have a look at our harmony videos, which cover that area.

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 Год назад +4

    Wonderful video (as always). The one little factoid you didn’t mention is that (thanks to well temperament and the enharmonic spelling that it allows) there are only two possible diminished 7th chords. For someone unfamiliar with dim 7ths, that would undoubtedly be quite confusing, so I completely understand you’re omitting that information. I wandered into the land of dim 7ths in one of my earliest choral compositions. It was purely accidental (at the time), but I learned quite a bit from the experience. Resolving dim 7ths via suspensions can make a passage even more rich and satisfying to the ear…but enough babbling for now. I’m looking forward to this month’s live streams. I trust that you’ve assembled the required jokes and puns for the occasion. [side note: I loved your aside about too much gin in your corn flakes-I’ll be using that one myself. Thanks!]

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +3

      Most kind of you and that’s very useful additional thinking. Yes, Christmas jokes are brewing. Meanwhile, enjoy your corn flakes!

    • @chrisisbell3080
      @chrisisbell3080 Год назад +6

      Surely there are three possible diminished seventh chords - plus their enharmonic equivalents and inversions. I.e. C, E flat, G flat (F#), B double flat (A); C#, E, G, B flat; and D, F, A flat, C flat (B).

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +1

      😀

    • @carlstenger5893
      @carlstenger5893 Год назад +2

      ​@@chrisisbell3080 You are correct. I mis-remembered. Thanks for the correction

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +2

      😀

  • @alandenton7047
    @alandenton7047 Год назад

    Very interesting, thank you

  • @josephinebrown6631
    @josephinebrown6631 Год назад

    Thank you kindly🤍

  • @ericmirza9497
    @ericmirza9497 Год назад

    Great stuff. Still don't know where augmented 2nd fits in?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +1

      Thanks. Watch out for melodic movements between Ab and B. That’s where the augmented 2nds occur.

  • @abagatelle
    @abagatelle Год назад

    A very useful exploration. Thank you Gareth. PS what happened to your Sight Singing courses, there were 2 but you've combined them into one. I'd enrolled in the first and was looking fwd to signing up to the second, but that's not possible now.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      We’re able to offer a cross grade over to the new combined course. We can give you a discount code that will reduce the price to the original price if you’d bought them separately. Send us an email if you’d like to set this up 😀

    • @abagatelle
      @abagatelle Год назад

      @@MusicMattersGB Thank you! As soon as I've completed the first (which is excellent) I'll email you.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      😀

  • @simongross3122
    @simongross3122 Год назад

    I'm not completely sure as I haven't tried it, but it looks to me that a diminished 7th chord in any inversion just as easily resolves to a V or V7 in some inversion without any respelling. Of course, only one of the outer notes follows the "pull" as you put it, but you still get very smooth voice leading. Maybe in this case, it's not really a resolution, but it's still on the way somewhere.

  • @ivantruffle1529
    @ivantruffle1529 Год назад

    Hello, teacher. I'm a beginner composer. I would like to ask you a question. Can we use diminish chords in some ways other than resolution? For example, in e minor harmonic scale. I use this chord progression: Em, Ebdim, C, B and resolve to Em. Thank you, teacher. I love your videos. ♡

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      That chord sequence works. That’s the bottom line. If it sounds good go for it! Thanks for your kind words.

  • @digitaldesigner5284
    @digitaldesigner5284 Год назад

    half diminished can be inverted altered chord?

  • @praddeeshm
    @praddeeshm 9 месяцев назад

    Does 7th note of a chord should resolve downwards only by semitone ? Or can it be resolved by tone too?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  9 месяцев назад

      Let it resolve into a note that belongs to the key

    • @praddeeshm
      @praddeeshm 9 месяцев назад

      @@MusicMattersGB Thank you sir 🤗

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  9 месяцев назад +1

      😀

  • @PijanitsaVode
    @PijanitsaVode Год назад

    In some contexts and styles (Ravel!, Debussy!), you'd have (or imply) a bass not a third down, and it's a 9th chord
    or a bass note a fifth down, and its an 11th chord.
    Has that been theorized?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      Extension chords are normally built from the bass up but yes, it’s possible to build the chord down from the bass.

    • @PijanitsaVode
      @PijanitsaVode Год назад

      ​@@MusicMattersGB That's not the point.
      I am talkiing about considering core chords of 3 or 4 notes triads/halfdiminished/diminished in several ways by saying the bass is
      a) where it seems on face value: CDGB, chord of C7M
      b) a 3d (and optionally an octave more) down : (A)CEGB: chord of Am9
      c) a 5th (and optionally an octave more) down : (F)(A)CEGB: chord of AF11
      This appying to all species: major, minor,
      but most interestingly diminished and half-diminished.
      I perceive this in Ravel (Jeux d'Eau), Debussy (Preludes and Images)...
      Quite possibly in Scriabin.
      Mathematically, those could be equivalence classes (?).
      A matter to discuss on Feb 11 maybe.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      I think we’re both making the same point.

  • @carquest3748
    @carquest3748 Год назад

    How do I know the resolution to any chord

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      Big question. We have quite a few videos on the best chords to follow x.

  • @AiChipo
    @AiChipo Год назад

    Is this music matters the shop that sadly closed in Maidstone ?

  • @lmmenthol1
    @lmmenthol1 Год назад +2

    Augmented second is the same as minor third, isn't it? Why call it differently?

    • @ilninfeo
      @ilninfeo Год назад +1

      They have the same sound, but they are different from harmonic point of view

    • @danielmads9160
      @danielmads9160 Год назад +1

      It is hard to understand at first, but Onorio Zaralli is right. The harmonic language and the auditory language is two very different aspects on the seemingly same thing. My best advice is to just think about it, rewatch this video a few times and then you'll suddenly understand it!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад +1

      Agreed. C to D# is an augmented 2nd, which you might well use in a key such as E minor. C to Eb is a minor 3rd, which you might well use in a key such as C minor. So the interval sounds the same but looks different because it behaves differently within the respective key.

  • @jacquelinejacobson6789
    @jacquelinejacobson6789 11 месяцев назад

    Have to resolve E flat to F minor. 2 ways - E flat with C minor base, or C 7th diminished?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  11 месяцев назад

      Can you give me more context to your question please?

    • @jacquelinejacobson6789
      @jacquelinejacobson6789 11 месяцев назад

      @@MusicMattersGB I'm playing "Make Me A Channel Of Your Peace " for an upcoming church mass, in E flat. First ending is E flat, but repeats to long legato ending. Need good transition chord orogression from E flat back to E flat.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  11 месяцев назад +1

      @jacquelinejacobson6789 You could use a Diminished 7th on A in the bass followed by Ic V7 I in Eb.

    • @jacquelinejacobson6789
      @jacquelinejacobson6789 11 месяцев назад

      @@MusicMattersGB thank you

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  11 месяцев назад

      @jacquelinejacobson6789 A pleasure

  • @octopusjjsnook
    @octopusjjsnook 2 месяца назад

    Sorry Gareth, I sill don't know how to recognise an augmented 2nd isn;'t a minor 3rd?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 месяца назад +1

      C to D# is an augmented 2nd because some kind of C to some kind of D is a 2nd. C to Eb is a minor 3rd because some kind of C to some kind of E is a 3rd. Different names but sound the same.

    • @octopusjjsnook
      @octopusjjsnook 2 месяца назад

      @@MusicMattersGB Many tnx. Got it now. I'm learning so much fro your brilliant teaching. So tnx for that as well.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 месяца назад

      Glad it’s helpful. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk

  • @FrankMGarcía
    @FrankMGarcía Год назад

  • @mikebrown8251
    @mikebrown8251 Год назад

    I thought augmented 2nd was same as minor third.

    • @mikebrown8251
      @mikebrown8251 Год назад

      Can you explain why A flat to B is an augmented second and not a minor third?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      Augmented 2nds sound the same as minor 3rds but they notate differently. In your example Ab to B is an augmented 2nd but Ab to Cb is a minor 3rd. Which you use relates to the key eg Ab to B might be used in C minor; Ab to Cb could be used in Ab minor.

  • @suriyaprakash5975
    @suriyaprakash5975 Год назад

    How to resolve a dim7th chord to a major/minor seventh chord. Ex B dim7th to C minor 7th?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      It’s not the most natural resolution but it’s perfectly possible. The best thing is for notes of the diminished 7th to move by step as much as possible.

  • @frankjamesbonarrigo7162
    @frankjamesbonarrigo7162 Год назад

    Confused

  • @soberobserver1646
    @soberobserver1646 Год назад

    Why don't you say f to a flat is a minor third, rather than saying it's an augmented 2nd?

  • @superblondeDotOrg
    @superblondeDotOrg Год назад

    "Now if you're not entirely happy about diminished seventh chords, ..."
    Lol diminished 7th chords are definitely not endearing.. it is their lot in life.

  • @wendigo2442
    @wendigo2442 Год назад

    You the man

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Год назад

      You’re most kind. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk