Most common functions {{Image frame|content= \new PianoStaff > \new Staff > >> |width=300|caption=Diminished seventh chord resolution: both
diminished fifths tend to
resolve inward,
doubling the
third of the tonic chord}} The most common form of the diminished seventh chord is that rooted on the
leading tone – for example, in the key of C, the chord (B–D–F–A) – so its other constituents are the , , and (flat
submediant)
scale degrees. These notes occur naturally in the harmonic minor scale. But this chord also appears in major keys, especially after the time of
J.S. Bach, where it is
borrowed from the
parallel minor. The chord possesses a
dominant function when rooted on the leading tone (otherwise it does not, but can serve other functions - see
below), and this is most straightforwardly shown when the root of a
dominant seventh chord is omitted. The remaining third, fifth and seventh of that chord form a diminished triad (whose new root is the third of the former chord), to which a diminished seventh can be added. Thus, in C (major or minor), a dominant seventh chord consisting of G–B–D–F can be replaced by a diminished seventh chord B–D–F–A. : { \omit Score.TimeSignature \relative c'' { 1 \bar "||" } } In
jazz harmony, a combination of the dominant seventh chord with its
substitute diminished seventh (with G in the bass and A simultaneously in an upper voice) yields the seven flat-9 chord, which intensifies the dominant function of either a diminished seventh or dominant seventh chord. Other transformations of this kind facilitate a variety of substitutions and modulations: any of the four notes in a diminished seventh chord are
raised by a
semitone, that raised note is then the flat-seventh of a
half-diminished seventh chord. Similarly, if any of the four notes in the diminished seventh chord are
lowered by a semitone, that lowered note is then the root of a dominant seventh chord. Diminished seventh chords may also be rooted on scale degrees other than the leading-tone, either as
secondary function chords temporarily borrowed from other keys, or as
appoggiatura chords: a chord rooted on the raised second scale degree (D–F–A–C in the key of C) acts as an appoggiatura to the tonic (C major) chord, and one rooted on the raised sixth scale degree (A–C–E–G in C major) acts as an appoggiatura to the dominant (G major) chord. Such chords however, having no leading tone in relation to the chords to which they resolve, cannot properly have a dominant function. They are therefore referred to commonly as
non-dominant diminished seventh chords or
common tone diminished seventh chords (see
below). In jazz, the diminished seventh chord is often based on the scale degree (the flat
mediant) and acts as a
passing chord between the mediant triad (or
first-inversion tonic triad) and the
supertonic triad: in C major, this would be the chord progression E minor – E diminished – D minor. The chord, "plays no role in... jazz." The passing chord is used widely in
Brazilian music such as
choro,
samba and
bossa nova.
Other functions {{Image frame|content= \new PianoStaff 1 } >> \new Staff > >> |width=300|caption=A chord progression with a sharpened subdominant with diminished seventh chord}} Another common use of the chord is as a
sharpened subdominant with diminished seventh chord. This is represented by the Roman notation iv7, but in classical music is more correctly represented as vii7/V, being a very common way for a composer to approach the dominant of any key. In the key of C, this is Fdim7. It is also a common chord in
jazz and
ragtime music. A common
traditional jazz or
Dixieland progression is IV–iv7–V7 (in C major: F–F7–G7). Another common usage of iv7 is often found in
Gospel music and jazz progressions such as in the song "
I Got Rhythm": :In C: | C C/E | F Fdim7 | C/G A7 | Dm7 G7 | One variant of the
supertonic seventh chord is the
supertonic diminished seventh with the raised supertonic, which is
enharmonically equivalent to the lowered third (in C: D = E). It may be used as a dominant
substitute. {{Image frame|content= { \new StaffGroup > \new Staff > >> } |width=330|caption=According to Benward and Saker, "The... [ii and vi] chords are very common in 20th-century
'barbershop' quartet music." The music shows the chord progression IV–vi6–Ger+6–I vi–V.}} {{Image frame|content= { \new PianoStaff 4--\f -- -- 2->\sf 4-- 2.~ 8 r r4 r } >> \new Staff 4--_\markup { \concat { "V" \hspace #10 "♯vi" \raise #1 \small "o" \combine \raise #1 \small 4 \lower #1 \small 2 \hspace #1 "V" } } -- -- 2-> 4-- 2.~ 8 r r4 r } >> >> } |width=330|caption=Example (B) in the
Waltz of the Flowers (1892) : { \omit Score.TimeSignature \relative c' { 1_\markup { \concat { "♯ii" \raise #1 \small "o7" \hspace #4 "I" \raise #1 \small "6" } } \bar "||" } } The ct7 chord, whose function, "is simply one of embellishment," most often spelled when embellishing I or when embellishing V, is distinguished from the vii7/V chord by common tone chords resolving to I or I while vii7/V resolves to V or I. : { \set Score.proportionalNotationDuration = #(ly:make-moment 1/4) \omit Score.TimeSignature \key d \major \relative c'' { 2_\markup { \concat { "vii" \raise #1 \small "o7" \hspace #1.2 "ii" \raise #1 \small "7" \hspace #4.7 "V" \raise #1 \small "7" \hspace #4 "I" } } \bar "||" } } ==Expressive potential==