The distance spanning seven note names, with 10 semitones between them.
Real tracks where you can hear this interval and practice it with movable-do syllables.
Chords whose formulas include this interval from the root note.
Scales whose formulas include this interval.
Intervals with a comparable quality and character.
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The first two large leaps of the well-known guitar riff form a minor seventh. This guitar riff repeats several times throughout the song.
After a somewhat strange intro, you hear the minor seventh when She Came is sung. Did you miss it? No worries, you'll hear it two more times after that.
The first two words of the melody of this song from the Westside Story is a minor seventh.
This song has a very recognizable bassline. The first big leap you hear is a minor seventh. This repeats several times starting from a different root note.
This ABBA classic has a dramatic tone due to the minor seventh. You can hear it in the chorus of The Winner Takes It All.
In this beautiful jazz song, after the piano and drum intro, you can hear the horns play a minor seventh in the first two notes of the melody. This theme repeats several times throughout the composition. It is a descending minor seventh interval.
You hear the minor seventh interval in the first two notes of the guitar part.
The minor seventh (m7) is a powerful, dissonant interval spanning 10 semitones. It is the defining tension of the dominant seventh chord and the primary motor for harmonic motion, providing the "bite" and "bluesy" edge found in almost every modern musical genre.
The m7 occurs between a root and its seventh letter name, such as C to B♭ or G to F. It is one semitone narrower than a major seventh. In the overtone series, the "harmonic seventh" (roughly an m7) is the first interval to introduce a strong pull toward a new tonal center, making it a critical bridge in functional harmony.
Harmonically, the m7 is the structural "shell" of the Dominant 7th (1–3–5–♭7) and Minor 7th (1–♭3–5–♭7) chords. In a dominant context, it creates a tritone with the major third, generating the high-energy instability that demands resolution to the tonic. Melodically, a large upward leap of an m7 sounds bold and assertive, while a downward m7 often feels like a weary or soulful "sigh," widely used in jazz and blues phrasing.
Practice identifying the m7 by its distinctive "unresolved" sound; it feels much more open and less "piercing" than the major seventh. Sing it by thinking of the first two notes of "Somewhere" from West Side Story or the first two notes of the Star Trek theme (original series).
When improvising, use the m7 to add "gravity" to your lines. In a major key, hitting the ♭7 (the "blue note") creates an instant bluesy or mixolydian flavor. In voice leading, always be aware of the 7th’s desire to resolve downward by step to the 3rd of the following chord.