Diminished 7th chords - naming conventions?
Comments
There are only three minor third intervals in a dim chord, then it just repeats itself up a register. It's best to name it whatever the root note is, followed by the dinky little circle °. E dim is made up of four completely different notes to A#°, namely, E, G, Bb and Db. It wouldn't work as E dim at all.
Indeed. My mistake.merlin said:There are only three minor third intervals in a dim chord…
What am I missing here then?merlin said:E dim is made up of four completely different notes to A#°, namely, E, G, Bb and Db. It wouldn't work as E dim at all.
A#° - A#, C#, E, G
E° - E, G, A# (Bb), C# (Db)
…aren’t these two names for the same thing?
It depend on the bass note of the chord. In your example one is E and the other is A. In a band it will depend on what the bass guitar is playing
Yes, I tend to think about what the bass line is doing when I come to name a diminished 7th chord.Roland said:It depend on the bass note of the chord. In your example one is E and the other is A. In a band it will depend on what the bass guitar is playing
A Diminished triad is comprised of two minor 3rds above the root - 1 b3 b5
A Diminished 7th is comprised of three minor 3rds above the root - 1 b3 b5 bb7
Taking A# as the root:
A#º - A#(1), C#(b3), E(b5)
A#º7 - A#(1), C#(b3), E(b5), G(bb7)
As they are symmetrical, any one of the notes can act as the name of the chord as they are "all the same" so to speak.
A#º7 is the same as Gº7 for example (and Eº7 and C#º7)
If I'm understanding you correctly, you're really thinking in terms of a dim7th rather than a diminished triad. But in either case it would imply an A7b9 sound (more so A#º7 as it has the b7(G) of A7 which is not present in the A#º triad).
For me in depends on the context, where the chord is placed in the progression etc. I wouldn't call it Eº unless E was in the bass of the chord... even then I'd still really think of it as A7b9 so maybe A7b9/E. If A# (or Bb) is in the bass I'd be more inclined to use it's diminished namesake.
A Diminished 7th is comprised of three minor 3rds above the root - 1 b3 b5 bb7
Taking A# as the root:
A#º - A#(1), C#(b3), E(b5)
A#º7 - A#(1), C#(b3), E(b5), G(bb7)
As they are symmetrical, any one of the notes can act as the name of the chord as they are "all the same" so to speak.
A#º7 is the same as Gº7 for example (and Eº7 and C#º7)
If I'm understanding you correctly, you're really thinking in terms of a dim7th rather than a diminished triad. But in either case it would imply an A7b9 sound (more so A#º7 as it has the b7(G) of A7 which is not present in the A#º triad).
For me in depends on the context, where the chord is placed in the progression etc. I wouldn't call it Eº unless E was in the bass of the chord... even then I'd still really think of it as A7b9 so maybe A7b9/E. If A# (or Bb) is in the bass I'd be more inclined to use it's diminished namesake.
That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals), can actually be thought of as an ….
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?
Because it has
F# (well ok that’s missing)
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
Bang on.viz said:That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals), can actually be thought of as an ….
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?Because it hasF# (well ok that’s missing)
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
octatonic said:Bang on.viz said:That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals), can actually be thought of as an ….
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?Because it hasF# (well ok that’s missing)
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
Sorry, I was being smart assed and talking enharmonics. Sorry, yes they're the same thing but you need the root (bass) note to define which chord it is.HAL9000 said:Indeed. My mistake.merlin said:There are only three minor third intervals in a dim chord…What am I missing here then?merlin said:E dim is made up of four completely different notes to A#°, namely, E, G, Bb and Db. It wouldn't work as E dim at all.
A#° - A#, C#, E, G
E° - E, G, A# (Bb), C# (Db)
…aren’t these two names for the same thing?
@viz nice way of looking at it, particularly when it’s the II of a I VII II V.
I’d handle with care though, I’d argue it runs the risk of sounding a bit random if voiced incorrectly in the context given, particularly as it doesn’t go up a 4th (IMO of course). It’s a 3rds and 7ths/voice leading issue for me 
Brad said:@viz nice way of looking at it, particularly when it’s the II of a I VII II V.I’d handle with care though, I’d argue it runs the risk of sounding a bit random if voiced incorrectly in the context given, particularly as it doesn’t go up a 4th (IMO of course). It’s a 3rds and 7ths/voice leading issue for me
Absolutely - it's a II7 - I, not a II7 - V7 - I.
The II is in 1st inv obvs, didn't mention that before.
But yes, handle everything I say with care!
One thing I've noticed is that in charts written by pros with much better education in music theory than I do (I have zero formal musical education so not hard) the naming of diminished chords is often pretty random. In particular I see charts for songs where the same chord patterns are repeated with changes of key and the name given to diminished chords isn't consistent. I'm not suggesting this is okay, just that it seems to be common for arrangers to think that as long as the chord symbol is telling you to play the right notes they don't need to be too fussy about what to call it.
I don’t disagree as what you say is theoretically correct and another way of looking at things. Especially if you want the chord to function in a certain way like you described. Of course, it opens up other possibilities, too.@viz said:That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals), can actually be thought of as an ….
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?Because it hasF# (well ok that’s missing)
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
Personally, I generally go with the simplest route and would see A#dim7 as a substitution of A7 dominant chord and also a “passing chord” into E7
Which opens up a host of possibilities for substitutions if we're thinking rootless chords... C7b9 and Eb7b9 to go with A7b9 and F#7b9 as already discussed. Handled with the utmost care of course :wink:viz said:Brad said:@viz nice way of looking at it, particularly when it’s the II of a I VII II V.I’d handle with care though, I’d argue it runs the risk of sounding a bit random if voiced incorrectly in the context given, particularly as it doesn’t go up a 4th (IMO of course). It’s a 3rds and 7ths/voice leading issue for me
Absolutely - it's a II7 - I, not a II7 - V7 - I.
The II is in 1st inv obvs, didn't mention that before.
But yes, handle everything I say with care!
Yes, definitely thinking dim7 (4 m3 intervals)viz said:That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals).
Interesting. I’m out right now but will definitely experiment with an F# later. The sound in my head though definitely needs the dissonance of a dim7 or perhaps a C7 (which still has the E, G, and Bb (A#) from the dim7. I guess the dim7 kind of acts a bit like a C7 and an F# and an A7 so can act as a substitution for any of them.viz said:F# chord
I think it's down to the duality of them, but also the context is the big thing. Take the first 4 chords of How Insensitive by Jobim which more often than not is written Dm9 - C#º7 - Cm6 - G7/B. It is completely legitimate to think/use A7b9 instead of C#º7 (as they are seen as interchangeable), but then the melody wouldn't work as well and the descending root movement would be lost. For the G7/B, Bº would be perfectly fine (again, interchangeable) but going G7 wouldn't describe the harmonic relationship in quite the same way, the melody would lose it's place and again, whilst it wouldn't sound bad, we'd lose more descending root movement.Blueingreen said:One thing I've noticed is that in charts written by pros with much better education in music theory than I do (I have zero formal musical education so not hard) the naming of diminished chords is often pretty random. In particular I see charts for songs where the same chord patterns are repeated with changes of key and the name given to diminished chords isn't consistent. I'm not suggesting this is okay, just that it seems to be common for arrangers to think that as long as the chord symbol is telling you to play the right notes they don't need to be too fussy about what to call it.
Taking those four chords, and keeping in mind the possibilities of naming diminished chords...
Dm9 - Eº7 - Cm6 - Dº
Dm9 - Gº7 - Cm6 - Fº
Dm9 - Bbº7 - Cm6 - Bº
None of those diminished triads or 7ths are wrong as such (as they're all inversions of each other so fair game) but they're not completely descriptive of what is actually supposed to happen musically. I'd have a headache if I saw any of those on a gig for this song
But how that relates to charts one writes can be many different things. Even the best musicians can chart things out that only really mean something to them. I'd have look at the kind of charts you're referring to, but often there can be a method to the (perceived) madness.
Yeah but can you play a Am eh?
That’s it. IMHO it’s best to go with what fits the context and whichever convention is the easiest to understand.Taking those four chords, and keeping in mind the possibilities of naming diminished chords...
Dm9 - Eº7 - Cm6 - Dº
Dm9 - Gº7 - Cm6 - Fº
Dm9 - Bbº7 - Cm6 - Bº
None of those diminished triads or 7ths are wrong as such (as they're all inversions of each other so fair game) but they're not completely descriptive of what is actually supposed to happen musically. I'd have a headache if I saw any of those on a gig for this songBut I know I can use them as voicings in my comping if the bass player is playing C# and B respectively, or if said bass player decides to invert any of them then that's on them
![]()
Bingo. Theory describes what’s played, and there can be many descriptions depending on your point of view.beed84 said:That’s it. IMHO it’s best to go with what fits the context and whichever convention is the easiest to understand.
So why do you see it as an F#7 rather than, say, an A7 or a C7?viz said:That A#dim7 (assuming you’re actually playing or thinking all 4 m3 intervals), can actually be thought of as an ….
…..
F# chord
People will disagree with me (and their answers are just as right as mine) because a) it doesn’t even contain F#!! and b) because what the hell has F# got to do with anything?
But it’s basically functioning as a secondary dominant II chord, which would go to the B, and then the E. Ok it misses out the B (because the B has already happened), but you can see what it’s doing. It’s like a ii-V-I. But it’s a secondary dominant so it’s a II7 (a dominant chord) - V (absent!) - I.
But wtf are we calling it F# for, lol?Because it hasF# (well ok that’s missing)
A# (the 3rd)
C# (the 5th)
E (the flat 7)
and then it has a G, which is the b9. So it’s F#7b9 (no F#)
Anyway that’s what it’s doing, functionally speaking.
Because it functions as a II chord, at least my ear is placing it there, doing II-chord stuff. Being a friend of the V. Also the tune - it goes from the B of the b7 to the A#, which makes you go huh? Ah that sounds like the major 3rd of something.
It can’t really be an A (b9) because it’s intentionally NOT the expected A. If the A were next, it would clearly be a passing chord to the A, it’s not an A itself. And the b5 and b9 only really work well in an altered context, which works on the dominant (or in this case, secondary dominant) - it just sounds wrong to have those flat notes, plus the jangly A#, and think of it as any type of IV chord. You really don’t wanna hear that on a IV chord;
and C just isn’t in the blues progression at all. I’m out at the mo and can’t really get my inner ear to sing it, so not sure why it doesn’t fit, will come back to it
and C just isn’t in the blues progression at all. I’m out at the mo and can’t really get my inner ear to sing it, so not sure why it doesn’t fit, will come back to it
Agreed, but it does share the E and G with an A7 and also with the E minor pentatonic which, to my ears anyway, is why it kind of works. I’ll admit it doesn’t resolve particularly well to the E unless it’s followed by something (such as A7 or B7) to help it along a bit. Using the dim 7th somehow manages to avoid this.viz said:…and C just isn’t in the blues progression at all. I’m out at the mo and can’t really get my inner ear to sing it, so not sure why it doesn’t fit, will come back to it
This is what I’m thinking - I’m seeing the dim7 chord as a substitution for either A7 or C7 as well as a passing chord. I don’t really hear the F#7 although I understand @viz ’s reasoning. I think it’s because the vocal line is focused around the G note so doesn’t sit well over an F#.beed84 said:
Personally, I generally go with the simplest route and would see A#dim7 as a substitution of A7 dominant chord and also a “passing chord” into E7
I believe you’ve spelt the A#dim chord correctly, but the Edim chord would be E G Bb Db. That way you’re spelling the intervals correctly. Most chords stack in thirds so you spell them that way…it’s the same with e harmonics in melodic lines, the line should represent the melodic contour as much as possible, which informs your choices of enharmonics.HAL9000 said:Indeed. My mistake.merlin said:There are only three minor third intervals in a dim chord…What am I missing here then?merlin said:E dim is made up of four completely different notes to A#°, namely, E, G, Bb and Db. It wouldn't work as E dim at all.
A#° - A#, C#, E, G
E° - E, G, A# (Bb), C# (Db)
…aren’t these two names for the same thing?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think @viz is approaching it in a more "harmonising the major scale" way rather than a substitution/passing chord way. For example, F#7b9 is another way of saying Gº – on the one hand you've got the dominant II in E major, on the other you've got most of the notes only a semitone away from B7.HAL9000 said:This is what I’m thinking - I’m seeing the dim7 chord as a substitution for either A7 or C7 as well as a passing chord. I don’t really hear the F#7 although I understand @viz ’s reasoning. I think it’s because the vocal line is focused around the G note so doesn’t sit well over an F#.beed84 said:
Personally, I generally go with the simplest route and would see A#dim7 as a substitution of A7 dominant chord and also a “passing chord” into E7
@HAL9000 sometimes with music, the most obvious answer is the right one 
We’d usually find that diminished chord in bar 6, acting as a #IV°7/bV°7 and as @viz says, we don’t usually place alterations on the IV so it’s probably not really helpful to think of it as being A7b9 (or any of the other options IMO) because it isn’t a substitute for A7b9 in this case (even though it is, generally speaking), it’s an A#°7 (or Bb°7) in its own right.
Where you’ve placed it in bar 10 is interesting and provokes quite the surprise due to the root movement. My ear is expecting to go to IV after V. Or to stay on V and maybe hit a quick I VI II V turnaround on bars 11 and 12, rather than going bV°7 to I Iike yours does. Even though that exact change happens in bars 6-7 it sounds smoother ascending from IV. With your diminished chord in bar 10, I’m still hearing the 3rd and 7th pull to the 7th and 3rd of E7 (like bars 6 and 7), exactly what happens from A7 to E7 anyway and what my ear expects, but the A#/Bb serves up a dose of extra dissonance and without wanting to speak on his behalf, I’m assuming viz is hearing that note as part of a 1st inv F#(7) that wants to resolve to B then to E. Perhaps something akin to this:
x x x
5 4 5
6 4 4
5 4 2
x x x
6 5 4
x x x
5 4 5
6 4 4
5 4 2
x x x
6 5 4
That being said, much can be achieved with voice leading and selective chord voicings so it can be made to work as A7b9 and certainly F#7b9. Try the following voicings but over the second chord try all the possible options in the bass and see how they feel.
2 3 4
0 2 3
2 3 4
1 2 2
(2) (?) x
x (?) (0)
0 2 3
2 3 4
1 2 2
(2) (?) x
x (?) (0)
It’s your tune and I’m not going to tell you what you should hear or do with it. It’s tricky to advise without having a broader idea of what is going in musically. Personally, if A# is in the bass like has been shared, I don’t hear that as an inverted V/V in this context unless I phrase it in a certain way (I totally get the reasoning and it does sound great, particularly when part of a I VI II V) as the pull of the 3rd and 7ths overall is too much for me.
However I guess all of these options are veering quite away from what your initial question is
Diminished chords can simply be diminished and the root note determines what we call it. If you want A# at the bottom, A#°7 to E7. E at the bottom, E°7 to E7. If you were to play a voicing with Bb as the lowest note but the bassist plays G, you’d have G°7 to E7. You wouldn’t really call A#°7 an E°7, even though they’re the same notes and we are told we can name them as such. It’s a little misleading IMO.
E7 | E7 | E7 | E7 |
B7 | A#° | E7 | B7 ||
Any rules? Or just what seems right?