G sharp Diminished major seventh

Diminished triad with major seventh (1–♭3–♭5–7); the “Hitchcock” major–minor collision, unstable and pivot-friendly.


The diminished major seventh chord stacks a diminished triad with a major seventh above the root (1-♭3-♭5-7). It is famous for its uncanny stability–instability mix: the diminished triad wants to move, but the major seventh adds a strange luminous ceiling. It appears in classical and film harmony as a color chord and in jazz as an occasional reharmonization device.

Construction

Formula: 1-♭3-♭5-7. In CoM7, spell C-E♭-G♭-B (enharmonic spellings vary).

Usage

Suspense cues, pivot chords, and brief chromatic clouds over a clear bass.

Examples

  • Film scoring for psychological tension
  • Late Romantic harmony with diminished colors
  • Modern jazz voicings as passing color

Play

Voice the major seventh clearly; avoid doubling that creates unclear tendency tones.

Ear-training cues

Diminished triad interior with a major seventh above the root—eerie, bright-dark.

Quality

translation.t.diminished

Aliases

oM7

Images

Piano voicing of chord G sharp Diminished major seventh - 0

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Which intervals and notes are in the diminished major seventh chord?