Mark Polesky wrote:
> Grammostola Rosea wrote:
>
>> I've learned when major scale:
>>
>> step:
>> I: maj7
>> II: min7
>> III: min7
>> IV: maj7
>> V: dominant 7
>> VI: min7
>> VII: -7
>>
>> But what when it is a minor scale? For example E minor? Which type of chords
>> belongs to the 7 steps?
>>
>
> If it's "natural" minor than it's the same series, but starting on
> the equivalent of degree 6 in the major:
>
> i: min7
> ii: -7
> III: maj7
> iv: min7
> v: min7
> VI: maj7
> VII: dom7
>
>
> Harmonic minor has a raised 7 which changes all odd degrees:
>
> i: min/maj7
> ii: -7
> III: maj7+5
> iv: min7
> V: dom7
> VI: maj7
> vii: dim7
>
> As a subtle point, I would always use lower case for minor chords.
>
> Hope this helps.
> - Mark
>
>
>
>
>
What is an -7 chord?
Is that an major chord with the 7 a half step lower? Or a minor chord?
\r
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