Harmonic seventh

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Template:Infobox interval The harmonic seventh interval, also known as the septimal minor seventh,[1][2] or subminor seventh,[3][4][5] is one with an exact 7:4 ratio[6] (about 969 cents).[7] This is somewhat narrower than and is, "particularly sweet",[8] "sweeter in quality" than an "ordinary"[9] just minor seventh, which has an intonation ratio of 9:5[10] (about 1018 cents).

Harmonic seventh, septimal seventhFile:Harmonic seventh on C.mid

The harmonic seventh arises from the harmonic series as the interval between the fourth harmonic (second octave of the fundamental) and the seventh harmonic; in that octave, harmonics 4, 5, 6, and 7 constitute the four notes (in order) of a purely consonant major chord (root position) with an added minor seventh (or augmented sixth, depending on the tuning system used).

Fixed pitch: Not a scale note

Although the word "seventh" in the name suggests the seventh note in a scale, and although the seventh pitch up from the tonic is indeed used to form a harmonic seventh in a few tuning systems, the harmonic seventh is a pitch relation to the tonic, not an ordinal note position in a scale. As a pitch relation (968.826 cents up from the reference or tonic note) rather than a scale-position note, a harmonic seventh is produced by different notes in different tuning systems:

Actual use in musical practice

File:Britten - Serenade prologue.png
Use of the seventh harmonic in the prologue to Britten's Serenade for Tenor, Horn and StringsFile:Britten - Serenade prologue.mid

When played on the natural horn, the note is often adjusted to 16:9 of the root as a compromise (for C maj7Template:Music, the substituted note is BTemplate:MusicTemplate:Music, 996.09 cents), but some pieces call for the pure harmonic seventh, including Britten's Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings.[11] Composer Ben Johnston uses a small "7" as an accidental to indicate a note is lowered 49 cents (1018 − 969 = 49), or an upside-down "7" to indicate a note is raised 49 cents. Thus, in C major, "the seventh partial", or harmonic seventh, is notated as Template:Music note with "7" written above the flat.[12][13]

Inverse, septimal major second on B7Template:MusicFile:Septimal major second on B7b.mid

The harmonic seventh is also expected from barbershop quartet singers, when they tune dominant seventh chords (harmonic seventh chord), and is considered an essential aspect of the barbershop style.[14][15]Template:Efn[16]

Origin of large and small seconds and thirds in harmonic series.[17]

In quarter-comma meantone tuning, standard in the Baroque and earlier, the augmented sixth is 965.78 cents – only 3 cents below 7:4, well within normal tuning error and vibrato. Pipe organs were the last fixed-tuning instrument to adopt equal temperament. With the transition of organ tuning from meantone to equal-temperament in the late 19th and early 20th centuries the formerly harmonic Gmaj7Template:Music and BTemplate:Musicmaj7Template:Music became "lost chords" (among other chords).

The harmonic seventh differs from the just 5-limit augmented sixth of Template:Small by a septimal kleisma (Template:Small, 7.71 cents), or about Template:Nobr.[18] The harmonic seventh note is about Template:Nobr Template:Nobr flatter than an equal-tempered minor seventh. When this flatter seventh is used, the dominant seventh chord's "need to resolve" down a fifth is weak or non-existent. This chord is often used on the tonic (written as Template:Font) and functions as a "fully resolved" final chord.[19]

The twenty-first harmonic (470.78 cents) is the harmonic seventh of the dominant, and would then arise in chains of secondary dominants (known as the Ragtime progression) in styles using harmonic sevenths, such as barbershop music.

Notes

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See also

Citations

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Further reading

Template:Intervals