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      • It is sometimes used to harmonise the top half of the melodic minor scale (the section of scale can appear in either the melody line or bass line), or it is sometimes used as a pivot chord when modulating to the relative major key. Take care never to use minor chord v at the point of modulation (V-I), or at a cadence (V-I, I-V etc.)
      mymusictheory.com/harmony/chord-v-minor-dominant/
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  2. The minor v chord in the key of A minor is Em spelled E-G-B. v to i in a minor key has a weaker sound of G moving to A (a whole-step) where G♯ to A (a half-step) would be stronger. Because of this weakness in minor keys, composers and songwriters often change the minor v chord to a major triad or dominant 7th chord to produce a stronger ...

  3. Minor chord v (F# minor) is used to harmonise the scale on beats 2 and 4 in bar 1. Notice however, that major chord V is used at the beginning of the piece, and at the cadence.

  4. A minor v chord in a major key is usually a secondary supertonic (ii) chord. I.e., if you hear a Gm in key of C major, it will normally be leading via C7 to F. Its function then is ii/IV. 36. Award. [deleted] • 7 yr. ago. lazer2112. • 7 yr. ago.

  5. Mar 12, 2017 · Specifically any chord with V or V7 in the numerator like V7/V or V7/ii is used to denote a secondary dominant and V7/V will pull you to V in whatever key you are in and V7/ii will pull you to ii in whatever key you are in and both would be V7 in their own key respectively.

  6. Dec 8, 2021 · Practically any progression that moves from V to IV (G to F in the key of C major) can be modified so that the V-chord is minor, as long as the melody note you’ve chosen still works: if you’ve got B as your melody note, you’d need to change that note to Bb if you want to experiment with a minor V.

  7. The primary dominant is the fifth-degree chord (V) of a key and has a strong tendency to resolve to the tonic chord (I). In a major key, for example, in C major, the dominant chord is G (G major), which resolves to C (C major). In minor keys, the dominant is usually a major or major seventh chord to reinforce the sense of resolution.

  8. As we learned in the first part of this tutorial on Minor Scale Basics, the 5 (a.k.a. “dominant”, a.k.a. V in numerals) chord in a minor key can be the major version (V) or minor (v). Listen to the audio example below.