Minor seventh (1–♭3–5–♭7): the everyday minor-seventh stack behind ii7, i7 vamps, and R&B shells—not the major-seventh minor color of mM7.
Real tracks where you can hear this chord and practice it with movable-do syllables.
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Parent scales and degrees where this chord appears as a diatonic sonority.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
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The moment the track drops, the main riff hits you instantly—a masterclass in funk built entirely around the minor 7th chord, driven by Nile Rodgers' razor-sharp rhythm guitar.
The minor seventh chord adds a minor seventh above the root to a minor triad, producing the tertian structure 1-♭3-5-♭7. It is the default “minor seventh” sound in lead sheets and classroom harmony: still recognisably minor because of the lowered third, but softened and given forward motion by the seventh. In major keys it most often appears as ii7 (Dorian color heading toward the dominant); in minor keys you will hear it on tonic and subdominant functions depending on style, melody, and borrowing from melodic minor or blues idioms.
Spelling pattern: 1-♭3-5-♭7. For Cm7, think C–E♭–G–B♭. Inversions follow normal seventh-chord inversion rules; on paper, prefer enharmonic spellings that keep each line readable in the key.
Use as ii7 before V7 in jazz and pop, i7 vamps in funk and R&B, and gentle minor pads in neo-soul. It can also anchor longer minor stacks (m9, m11, m13) where the seventh remains the primary color even when extensions are omitted from the symbol.
Shell voicings highlighting ♭3 and ♭7 are efficient; add the fifth when you need weight, omit it when you need room for extensions. Resolve the seventh by step into the next chord’s third or seventh for smooth classical or jazz voice leading.
Hear minor third quality plus a minor seventh above the root—cooler than dominant harmony, darker than major-seventh harmony, more mobile than a plain minor triad.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | D♯ | |||
| 3 | F♯ | |||
| 7 | A♯ | |||
| 10 | C♯ |
| Degree | Triad | Seventh | Extended | Scale | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | |||||
| II | |||||
| III | |||||
| IV | |||||
| V | |||||
| VI | |||||
| VII |
These modes come from a defined series of intervals! Checkout our blogpost about the major modes!