The relative major of a minor.
What is C Major?
The Leading must resolve to this.
What is the tonic?
The scale degrees on which the three primary chords of a key are formed.
What are the tonic, subdominant and dominant?
The tonic triad of G major.
What is G, B, D?
The bass note of the first inversion tonic triad of A Major.
What is C#?
The relative major of b minor.
What is D Major?
The 7th of a chord resolves by this.
What is a step down?
The scale degree that is a half step lower than the tonic.
What is the leading tone?
The subdominant triad of E-flat Major.
What is A-flat, C, and E-flat?
The bass note of the root position dominant triad of A Major.
What is E?
What is A Major?
A Tritone that is written as an augmented fourth resolves to this size of interval.
What is a 6th?
The scale degree of the 7th of the dominant 7th chord that resolves down.
What is the Subdominant?
The dominant triad of d minor.
What is A, C#, E?
The bass note of the first inversion subdominant triad of D Major?
What is B?
The relative major of c minor.
What is E-flat major?
A Tritone that is written as an diminished 5th resolves to this size of interval.
What is a third?
What is the subtonic?
The dominant 7th chord of a minor.
What is E, G#, B, and D?
The bass note of the first inversion dominant triad of e minor.
What is D#?
The relative major of a-flat minor.
What is C-flat Major?
The melodic interval that should be avoided in four-part writing that occurs in the harmonic form of the minor scale.
What is an augmented second?
The scale degree that should be double in most root position chords that are made on the first scale degree.
What is the tonic?
The dominant 7th chord of E-flat Major.
What is B-flat, D, F, and A-flat?
The bass note of the third inversion dominant 7th chord of G Major.
What is C?