Most common functions The half-diminished seventh chord has three
functions in contemporary harmony:
predominant (also called "subdominant"),
diminished, and
dominant function. The vast majority of its occurrences are on the II chord in the
minor mode, where it takes a predominant function, leading naturally to the dominant V chord. Not including the
root motion, there is only a one-note difference between a half-diminished seventh chord and a V7 chord with a flat ninth. Since it is built on the
diatonic II chord of the minor scale, most of the time the
II-V pattern resolves to a minor
tonic (such as in the progression D7 – G79 – Cm), but there are also instances where there is a major tonic resolution. {{Image frame|content= \new Staff > |width=300|caption=The first three measures of the
Ciaccona movement of
J. S. Bach's
Violin Partita No. 2 in D minor}} For example, over the first three bars of the
Ciaccona movement of
J.S. Bach's
Violin Partita No. 2 in D minor, the tonic in the first measure progresses to the ii7 chord (in
third inversion) for the first beat of the second measure, then to the dominant (a V7 in
first inversion), and then back to the tonic in the third measure. Diminished chord function is rarer but still exists. Half-diminished chords can function in the same way as
fully diminished chords, such as in the chord progression CM7 – Cdim7 – Dm7, or Em7 – Edim7 – Dm7, where the diminished chord serves as a
chromatic passing chord preceding a chord with a diatonic root. A typical example of this is when IV7 progresses to IVm7, such as in the
Cole Porter song "
Night and Day", where there is the progression F7 – Fm7 – Em7 – Edim7 – Dm7 – G7 – CM7. If analyzed in its predominant function, it wouldn't sufficiently explain how it functions preceding the Fm7 chord. In dominant function, the VII half diminished chord, like its fully diminished counterpart, can take the place of the dominant V chord at a point of
cadential motion. This chord, sometimes called a
leading-tone diminished seventh chord, is represented by the
Roman numeral notation vii7, the root of which is the
leading-tone to the tonic.}} The dominant function of the half-diminished seventh chord may also occur in a
secondary dominant context, i.e., as part of a progression where the chord performs the dominant function with respect to the overall key's dominant chord. In this scenario, the half-diminished seventh chord is built on the
tritone of the overall key and is equivalent to a secondary dominant seventh chord with added ninth and omitted root. If written with respect to the overall key, this chord is styled "iv7," but in terms of its function in the progression, the styling "viiø7/V" is more descriptive.
Other functions A variant of the supertonic seventh chord (ii7) is the supertonic half-diminished seventh with the
raised supertonic (ii7), which is
enharmonically equivalent to the lowered
third (in C: D = E). :D–F–A–C = F–A–C–E :D7 = Fmadd dim7 The sharpened subdominant diminished triad with minor seventh chord is represented with the Roman numeral notation iv7; the root of this chord is the raised
subdominant (sharpened fourth). That root also serves as the leading tone to the dominant when used in the vii7/V function described above; such a function is the diminished, secondary-dominant equivalent of a
backdoor progression. For example, in the
key of
C major, the chord playing this role is F7. The half-diminished seventh chord may also be enharmonically interpreted as an
augmented sixth chord. The
minor seventh interval (between root and seventh degree, i.e.: { C B } in { C E G B } ) is enharmonically equivalent to an
augmented sixth { C E G A }. Transposing this gives { A C D F }, a virtual minor version of the
French augmented sixth chord. Like the typical augmented sixth chord, this enharmonic interpretation gives on a
resolution irregular for the half-diminished seventh but regular for the
augmented sixth chord, where the two voices at the
diminished third (enharmonic
major second) converge to
unison or diverge to
octave. ==Half-diminished seventh chord table==