Dominant 7ths??? 10 points please help!?!


Question: Dominant 7ths!?!?!? 10 points please help!!?
In Music harmony notation what is V 4----3!.!.!.!. please provide an actual example with notes!.!.!.Www@Enter-QA@Com


Answers:
That is the figured bass notation for a suspension - a nonharmonic tone held over from a previous chord that will then resolve to a chord tone!.

There are normally 3 parts to the suspension:
1) Preparation - the voice that will have a suspension first has the note as a consonat chord tone in the preceding chord
2) Suspension - the chord tone is held over from that previous chord and now becomes a dissonance
3) Resolution - the dissonant suspension resolves to a chord tone; usually downward, although there can be decoration or an upward resolution (ritardation)!.

As the poster above states, V4-3 in the key of C would look something like this:
Sop| C-B
Alto|G
Ten|D
Bass|G

Remember that figured bass is simply intervals above the bass - add a fourth and then resolve that to a third!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

Let's work in key of C Major

Your dominant 7th (V7) is G7 (G B D F)
Play the dominant 7th and move the 4 to a 3 !.!.!. in other words !.!.!. in the key of C the 4 is the F !.!.!. during the chord the F moves to a E and will probably end up resolving to a 2 or acting as an anticipation to the E of the Tonic chord!.

Make sense!?!?Www@Enter-QA@Com

Do you mean a 2nd inversion V7 chord!?

For instance, C major's V4---3 (3 has to be beneath the 4 though) is D, F, G, B!.

IF that is what you mean!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

Kucletus answered your question correctly!.
Give him 10 points!.Www@Enter-QA@Com

wtf u talking aboutWww@Enter-QA@Com



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