Why Seventh Chords Matter
Triads (three-note chords) are the foundation of Western harmony, but seventh chords are where music gets its color and sophistication. Jazz, funk, R&B, and film music all rely heavily on seventh chords to create richness, tension, and resolution.
Understanding how seventh chords are built directly from scales gives you a powerful framework for writing, improvising, and analyzing music.
What Is a Seventh Chord?
A seventh chord is simply a triad with one more note added on top — the 7th degree of the scale, counted from the root. Stack the 1st, 3rd, 5th, and 7th notes of any scale and you have a seventh chord.
Because different scales have different interval patterns, the quality of the 3rd, 5th, and 7th will vary — producing four main types of seventh chords:
- Major 7th (maj7): Major triad + major 7th
- Dominant 7th (7): Major triad + minor 7th
- Minor 7th (m7): Minor triad + minor 7th
- Half-diminished / Minor 7♭5 (m7♭5): Diminished triad + minor 7th
Harmonizing the Major Scale
Take the C major scale: C D E F G A B. Build a four-note chord on each degree by stacking every other note:
| Degree | Chord | Type |
|---|---|---|
| I | Cmaj7 | Major 7th |
| II | Dm7 | Minor 7th |
| III | Em7 | Minor 7th |
| IV | Fmaj7 | Major 7th |
| V | G7 | Dominant 7th |
| VI | Am7 | Minor 7th |
| VII | Bm7♭5 | Half-diminished |
This pattern — maj7, m7, m7, maj7, dom7, m7, m7♭5 — is the same for every major key. Memorize it and you can instantly name all seventh chords in any key.
How Modal Scales Change Chord Quality
When you harmonize a modal scale instead of a pure major scale, the chord qualities shift. This is what gives each mode its unique harmonic fingerprint.
For example, in D Dorian (D E F G A B C), harmonizing from D gives:
- i = Dm7 (minor 7th)
- IV = G7 (dominant 7th — unique to Dorian!)
In D Aeolian (natural minor), the IV chord would be Gm7. The switch from minor to dominant on the IV is the clearest sign that you're in Dorian.
Extensions: Going Beyond the 7th
Once you've built a seventh chord, you can keep stacking thirds to add extensions:
- 9th = the 2nd degree an octave up
- 11th = the 4th degree an octave up
- 13th = the 6th degree an octave up
A Cmaj13 chord, for instance, includes C, E, G, B, D, F, and A — all seven notes of the C major scale stacked in thirds. In practice, you'd voice-lead and omit notes, but understanding the full structure is key.
Practical Exercises
- Pick a key and write out all seven seventh chords without looking at a reference.
- Play each chord on your instrument and listen carefully to the quality differences.
- Try harmonizing the Dorian and Lydian modes — notice how the chord qualities shift.
- Take a song you know and identify which scale/mode its chords come from.
Key Takeaway
Seventh chords are not arbitrary collections of notes — they grow directly out of scales. Once you understand this relationship, reading chord charts, composing progressions, and improvising become far more intuitive and creative.