Construction
Built from these intervals: 1-b5.
The b5 sits six half steps above the root -- a tritone, exactly half an octave. This is a dyad: just two notes defining the most unstable interval in tonal harmony. That instability comes not from harshness but from symmetry -- the tritone divides the octave into two equal halves, so neither note sounds more like the root than the other.
Harmonic Function
In Roman numeral analysis (uppercase = major, lowercase = minor), the b5 dyad has no fixed degree because it carries no third. Function depends on context:
- Tritone within
V7-- the interval between 3 and b7 of any dominant seventh chord; the b5 dyad isolates that tension bII/Vsubstitution pivot -- tritone substitution replacesV7with a dominant seventh a tritone away. It works because both chords share the same tritone: the 3 and b7 ofV7swap roles inbII7(the 3 of one becomes the b7 of the other). The b5 dyad is the shared core.- Color chord -- used for dissonant color rather than functional resolution, especially in film scoring and modern jazz
Character
Unstable and hollow. The tritone exposed as a bare dyad sounds questioning, even ominous -- pure tension with nowhere obvious to go. Sometimes called "diabolus in musica," though that nickname dates to the 18th century rather than medieval times. As a dyad, the b5 has no third -- it is neither major nor minor, just raw instability. Compare to the power chord (1-5): both are dyads, but the 5 is maximum consonance while the b5 is maximum instability. Seven half steps versus six -- the distance between anchor and unrest.
Related Sounds
These chords are closely related -- each builds on or contains the same tritone:
- 5 (1-5) -- the consonant counterpart; perfect fifth where b5 has the tritone
- dim (1-b3-b5) -- adds b3, building the diminished triad around the same tritone
- 7 (1-3-5-b7) -- the tritone lives between 3 and b7 inside this chord, giving it dominant pull
- dim7 (1-b3-b5-bb7) -- two interlocking tritones, fully symmetric
Voice Leading
Voice leading tracks how individual notes move from one chord to the next. The tritone naturally resolves by contrary half-step motion -- each note pulls outward or inward to consonance.
- Tritone resolving outward (
V7context toI): The lower note of the tritone moves up a half step; the upper note moves down a half step. Classic outward resolution -- the tritone opens into a major third. - Parallel chromatic slide: Both notes shift up by a half step, preserving the tritone on a new root. Common in jazz turnarounds -- short progressions that cycle back to the top of a form.
- Tritone resolving to a fourth: One note moves up a half step while the other holds as a common tone. The tritone resolves to a perfect fourth, releasing tension without a full cadence.
These movements apply in any key — the intervals are the same regardless of root.
Practice Seeds
Tritone vs. fifth. Play 1-5, then 1-b5. One half step transforms consonance into instability -- internalize this contrast as the boundary between rest and tension.
Outward resolution. Play the tritone, then resolve both notes outward by a half step. Feel the tension release as the interval opens into a major third.
Find it inside V7. Play a dominant seventh chord and isolate the 3 and b7. Recognize that the b5 dyad is the same tritone driving dominant resolution -- this connects the dyad to functional harmony.
Symmetry test. Play the tritone, then invert it (swap which note is on top). It sounds the same either way -- that symmetry is why both notes can serve as a root, and it is the foundation of tritone substitution.