Minor seventh
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| Inverse | major second | |
|---|---|---|
| Name | ||
| Other names | - | |
| Abbreviation | m7 | |
| Size | ||
| Semitones | 10 | |
| Interval class | 2 | |
| Just interval | 16:9 or 9:5 | |
| Cents | ||
| Equal temperament | 1000 | |
| Just intonation | 996 or 1018 | |
A minor seventh is the smaller of two commonly occurring musical intervals that span seven diatonic scale degrees. The prefix 'minor' identifies it as being the smaller of the two (by one chromatic semitone), its larger counterpart being a major seventh. The minor seventh is abbreviated as m7 and its inversion is the major second. Its most common occurrence is built on the root of the prevailing key's dominant triad, producing the all-important dominant seventh chord.
A minor seventh in just intonation corresponds to a pitch ratio of 16:9 or 9:5, while in an equal tempered tuning it is a ratio of 1:210/12 (approximately 1.782), or 1000 cents, 3.910 cents sharper than the 16:9 ratio and 17.596 cents flatter than the 9:5 ratio.
An interval close in magnitude is the harmonic seventh, with an exact 7:4 ratio (e.g., the three-quarter point of the octave, 1.75), which makes it quasi-harmonically significant. This interval is about 969 cents, or one-third of a semitone flatter than the equal-temperament minor seventh.
The minor seventh is considered a mildly dissonant interval, more dissonant than the thirds and sixths, but considerably less dissonant than the minor second and major seventh. It is the second hardest interval to identify by ear [1], just behind the minor sixth.
See also:
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