B natural.
E major.
The secondary dominant of b minor is a C# major chord.
An E dominant 7 chord consists of the notes E, G, B, and D. The intervals in this chord are a root (E), major third (G), perfect fifth (B), and minor seventh (D).
The most common chords used in standard tuning are major chords (like C, G, D), minor chords (like A minor, E minor), and dominant 7th chords (like G7, D7).
To play an E minor dominant 7th chord on the guitar, use the following fingering: Place your index finger on the 7th fret of the A string Place your middle finger on the 8th fret of the D string Place your ring finger on the 7th fret of the G string Place your pinky finger on the 8th fret of the B string
E major.
The dominant 7th chord is composed of the root, major third, perfect fifth, and minor seventh. The dominant seventh for the F# key would be F#, A#, C# and E.
The dominant note for D major and D minor is A.
The secondary dominant of b minor is a C# major chord.
An E dominant 7 chord consists of the notes E, G, B, and D. The intervals in this chord are a root (E), major third (G), perfect fifth (B), and minor seventh (D).
F# dominant 7 contains Gb A Db E it is a Gb minor 7th (Gbm7)
SCALES: Major: G, Bb, E, Db Harmonic Minor: E, G, C#, Bb Melodic Minor: E, G, C#, Bb ARPEGGIOS: Major: G, Bb, E, Db Minor: E, G, C#, Bb DOMINANT SEVENTHS: G, Bb, E, D hope this helped :)
Dominant triads, which are built on the fifth (or dominant) note of the scale, are (almost) always major - even when written in a minor key. This is because the middle note (which is the 7th note of the scale - known as the leading note) is always raised by a chromatic semitone.For example:The C major dominant triad is composed of the notes G, B, and D.The a minor dominant triad is composed of the notes E, G#, and B. Although there are no accidentals in the key signature of this scale, the 7th note is raised from G-natural to G# in order to make it a harmonic scale.That's not to say that minor dominant triads don't exist, because they do. They're just rare. You might be able to find a minor dominant triad in a situation where the dominant triad is played in conjunction with a descending melodic line (i.e. where the 6th and 7th notes of the scale aren't raised).
The dominant of A is E.
The most common chords used in standard tuning are major chords (like C, G, D), minor chords (like A minor, E minor), and dominant 7th chords (like G7, D7).
To play an E minor dominant 7th chord on the guitar, use the following fingering: Place your index finger on the 7th fret of the A string Place your middle finger on the 8th fret of the D string Place your ring finger on the 7th fret of the G string Place your pinky finger on the 8th fret of the B string
The relative minor of E major is C# minor.