CM13, first inversion = e13(♭9), 2nd inversion = G13... Eventually seven chords along a ladder of thirds. Created by Hyacinth (talk) 14:13, 31 March 2010 using Sibelius 5.
Ninth chord resolutions as recommended by Schoenberg based on the rules for seventh chords: dissonances resolve downwards and the fifth rises to the first scale degree. Root position (A), First inversion (B), Second inversion (C), Third inversion (D), and Fourth inversion, all V9-I, followed by a nondominant example in root position: I9-IV (E).
Ninth chord resolutions as recommended by Schoenberg based on the rules for seventh chords: dissonances resolve downwards and the fifth rises to the first scale degree. Root position (A), First inversion (B), Second inversion (C), Third inversion (D), and Fourth inversion, all V9-I, followed by a nondominant example in root position: I9-IV (E).
Ninth chord resolutions as recommended by Schoenberg based on the rules for seventh chords: dissonances resolve downwards and the fifth rises to the first scale degree. Root position (A), First inversion (B), Second inversion (C), Third inversion (D), and Fourth inversion, all V9-I, followed by a nondominant example in root position: I9-IV (E).
Ninth chord resolutions as recommended by Schoenberg based on the rules for seventh chords: dissonances resolve downwards and the fifth rises to the first scale degree. Root position (A), First inversion (B), Second inversion (C), Third inversion (D), and Fourth inversion, all V9-I, followed by a nondominant example in root position: I9-IV (E).
Ninth chord resolutions as recommended by Schoenberg based on the rules for seventh chords: dissonances resolve downwards and the fifth rises to the first scale degree. Root position (A), First inversion (B), Second inversion (C), Third inversion (D), and Fourth inversion, all V9-I, followed by a nondominant example in root position: I9-IV (E).
Passamezzo moderno/"Gregory Walker" chord progression in C major, beginning with tonic chord in second inversion and continuing using minimal-change and "closest-packing" rules (minimizing each voice's change from previous note and keeping each chord's notes as close to each other as possible; resulting order of inversions is second-first-second-root/second-first-second-root-second)
Passamezzo moderno/"Gregory Walker" chord progression in C major, beginning with tonic chord in first inversion and continuing using minimal-change and "closest-packing" rules (minimizing each voice's change from previous note and keeping each chord's notes as close to each other as possible; resulting order of inversions is first-root-first-second/first-root-first-second-first)
This is a future bass chord progression made with 3x osc, the chords are inversions of cm, ab, fm and gm in that order, you can do whatever you want with this :).
A bionic man-like effect. Created in qtractor with calf organ and c* scape stereo delay. Processed in audacity to speed up velocity, added a tremolo inverse sawtooth effect to increase ducking at a frequency, and added fade in and out.
Thirteenth chord inversion with no fifth or ninth and the flatted seventh in the bass. Different voicing for guitar. Created by Hyacinth (talk) 14:10, 7 July 2009 using Sibelius 5.
A bionic man-like effect. Created in qtractor with calf organ and c* scape stereo delay. Processed in audacity to speed up velocity, added a tremolo inverse sawtooth effect, and tremolo sawtooth effect to increase ducking at a frequency, and added fade in and out. This is probably closer to the original.