10 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Secondary Leading Tone Chords"

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Secondary leading-tone chord from Purcell's Z. 669, III, mm. 9-13.
Author: Hyacinth
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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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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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viio/V - V - I chord progression. Common in ragtime.
Author: Hyacinth
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Chord progression with diminished seventh chords added.
Author: Created by Hyacinth (talk) using Sibelius 5.
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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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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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