20 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Secondary Chords"

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Secondary leading-tone chord: viio7/V - V in C major. Created by Hyacinth (talk) 05:18, 23 May 2010 using sibelius 5.
Author: Hyacinth at English Wikipedia
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Secondary half-diminished leading-tone chord in Brahms Op. 119, no. 3, mm.49-51.
Author: Hyacinth
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Secondary leading-tone chord from Purcell's Z. 669, III, mm. 9-13.
Author: Hyacinth
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Secondary supertonic chord: ii7/V - V/V [- V] in C major (a7 - D7 [- G]). Created by Hyacinth (talk) 15:14, 18 July 2010 using Sibelius 5.
Author: Hyacinth at English Wikipedia
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Chord progression with diminished seventh chords added.
Author: Created by Hyacinth (talk) using Sibelius 5.
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viio/V - V - I chord progression. Common in ragtime.
Author: Hyacinth
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Chord progression (half note open guitar chords) for the widely recorded ragtime influenced song written in 1923 by Jimmy Cox, "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out". It features chromaticism through chains of secondary dominants (III = V/V/V/V = V/vi, VI = V/V/V = V/ii, II = V/V, and V) and a secondary diminished seventh chord (viio7/V=♯IVo7).
Author: Jimmy Cox
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Secondary chords in Maria Wolowska Szymanowska's Nocturne in B-flat Major, mm.1-5.
Author: Hyacinth
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Dominant form chord: Diminished leading-tone chord preceding tonic chord and possessing a secondary dominant function.
Author: Hyacinth
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Dominant form chord: Diminished seventh leading-tone chord preceding tonic chord and possessing a secondary dominant function.
Author: Hyacinth
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Dominant form chord: Half-diminished leading-tone chord preceding tonic chord and possessing a secondary dominant function.
Author: Hyacinth
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Chords with a primary or secondary dominant function.
Author: Hyacinth
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Secondary dominants in Beethoven's Symphony No. 1, introduction.
Author: Untitled
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The secondary dominant chords of the key of C major, each given before the chord of which it is the dominant. Digital recording, made with an acoustic piano and Wavesurfer software by Opus33. This music is in the public domain. The recording is not copyrighted, and it is hereby released by Opus33 into the public domain. The following tag, though it is not quite accurate, is included in order to authorize this file according to the Wikipedia rules:
Author: Opus33 at English Wikipedia
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Extended dominant relationship in Schubert's German Dance, D. 643, opening.
Author: Created by Hyacinth (talk) 14:12, 22 December 2010 using Sibelius 5.
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Example of leading-tone triad (viio) and secondary leading-tone triad in Johann Sebastian Bach's Chorale: Gott der Vater wohn' uns bei (BWV 317). Identified by Forte (1979) ISBN 0-03-020756-8 as BWV 748, which is currently attributed to Johann Gottfried Walther.
Author: Hyacinth
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Secondary dominant with barbershop seventh chords. V/V - V - I in F major (G7-C7-F). Derived from [1]. In just intonation. Sevenths are harmonic sevenths, and the F in the first measure is 27.26 cents lower than the F in the third measure. Pitch bend matches intervals.
Author: Hyacinth
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V of V chord progression in "Sweet Georgia Brown". V/V/V-V/V-V-I: A-D-G-C. Note that the tempo is kept but the number of measures is cut in half.
Author: Hyacinth
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