Welcome to The Circle, our weekly voyage into the mysteries of The Circle of 5ths. This week we begin our exploration of geometric shapes and how they can reveal the internal structure of chords. Overlay a square on the circle and you'll notice the four points are pointing! at four different notes, C-Eb-Gb-A, the four notes contained in a Diminished 7th Chord.
The reason the Dim7th chord is so square is that every interval within the chord is of equal size, as the four sides of a square are of equal length. From C to Eb is an interval of a minor 3rd as is the interval from Eb to Gb, Gb to A and A to C.
We can also n
umber each note of the Diminished 7th chord to see what scale degrees we are using to form the chord. C is the I, Eb is the flatted 3rd, Gb is the flatted 5th and A is called the double-flat 7th.Here's the great thing about diminished 7th chords that makes learning all of them so simple. Since all the intervals are of equal value you can name th! e chord from any of the notes the chord contains.
The C diminished 7th chord above can also be called Eb diminished 7th, Gb diminished 7th and A diminished 7th. Also, since Eb and Gb are enharmon
Click the square one more time counter-clockwise and the final set of diminished 7th chords appear at the four corners of the square.
This is the final set of dim7th chords because if we click the square one more notch counter-clockwise we are back to our original
position.Since the same diminished 7th chord repeats ! every third click of the square, the dim7th chord shape will in-turn repeat itself every third fret on the ukulele. These chord inversions are very useful using the shape where all the strings are fretted.
Observation: Learn one diminished chord and you've basically learned them all since they all have the same square structure.
Dim7th Intervals and Inversions
chord in circle
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