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Standard
Scales
Chords
B
Major 7
Frets: 0 - 24

Formula
Notes

M3-m3-M3
B
D
F
A
D
A
F
B
F
1
A
2
D
B
F
3
4
A
D
A
5
B
F
B
6
D
A
7
B
F
8
9
D
A
F
D
10
B
11
D
A
12
F
B
F
13
A
14
D
B
F
15
16
A
D
A
17
B
F
B
18
D
A
19
B
F
20
21
D
A
F
D
22
B
23
D
A
24

Major Seventh Chord

The Major Seventh Chord is a major triad to which a major seventh is added. The notes are: root, major third, perfect fifth, and major seventh. Unlike the minor seventh of the Dominant 7, the major seventh creates a 'warm', 'velvety', 'dreamy' and inherently stable sound, without the aggressive resolving impulse. It is frequently used as a tonic chord (I degree) or subdominant (IV degree) in major keys, adding a sophisticated, relaxed, and somewhat 'bright' color. It is ubiquitous in jazz, soul, and modern light music, contributing to an atmosphere of calm and harmonic complexity.

Common Progressions

  • Imaj7 - IVmaj7 (a tonic and subdominant progression that creates a serene, open, and rich atmosphere)
  • ii - V7 - Imaj7 (the standard and almost iconic resolution of a jazz progression, where the I degree is a Maj7 for a full and sophisticated final sound)
  • Imaj7 - iii7 - vi7 - ii7 - V7 - Imaj7 (an extended and complex jazz progression, where the Maj7 maintains its function as an enriched tonic)