A sharp Major seventh

Major seventh (1–3–5–7); stable major color with leading-tone pull to the octave.


The major seventh chord is 1-3-5-7: a major triad plus a major seventh above the root. It is the tonic chord of the Ionian mode and one of the most important tertian sonorities in jazz, pop, and classical harmony. The major seventh creates a bright, settled, slightly jazzier color than a plain major triad because the seventh wants smooth resolution downward by step in many melodic contexts.

Construction

Formula: 1-3-5-7. In Cmaj7, spell C-E-G-B.

Usage

Tonic and subdominant colors in major keys, Imaj7 in jazz standards, and pop ballads for lush endings.

Examples

  • Imaj7 openings in jazz ballads
  • Pop choruses on Imaj7 for shimmer
  • Classical seventh-chord progressions in late Romantic harmony

Play

Shell voicings (3 and 7) are efficient; add tensions after the function is clear.

Ear-training cues

Major triad plus a major seventh—bright, stable, “jazzy major.”

Quality

major

Aliases

maj7Δma7M7Maj7^7

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the A sharp Major seventh chord

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Which intervals and notes are in the major seventh chord?

To which mode does major seventh belong?

I :: Major on Major
IV :: Lydian on Major
VI :: Lydian sharp ninth on Harmonic Minor