Chord Detail
G Minor Seventh Chord
Gm7 is a G minor seventh chord — one of the most essential chords in Western music. Mellow, smooth, and emotionally nuanced, it is the backbone of jazz, soul, gospel, and neo-soul harmony, appearing wherever warmth and depth are needed.
The minor seventh chord combines a minor triad with a minor seventh. Gm7 uses G, Bb, D, F. The minor third (Bb) gives the chord its darker quality. The minor seventh (F) adds depth without the tension of a dominant chord. In jazz harmony, the minor seventh most famously appears as the ii chord in the ii–V–I progression — the most fundamental harmonic motion in jazz. The chord's combination of darkness (minor third) and smoothness (minor seventh) makes it versatile: it appears as ii7, iii7, vi7, and even the tonic im7 in minor key settings.
Formula: 1 – ♭3 – 5 – ♭7
1Root0 semitones♭3Minor Third3 semitones5Perfect Fifth7 semitones♭7Minor Seventh10 semitonesMellow, smooth, bittersweet, and introspective. More colorful than a plain minor triad — soft and sophisticated.
Minor chords introduce depth and emotional weight through a lowered third degree. They carry a sense of longing, introspection, or quiet sadness — without collapsing into chaos. The minor triad is the second most universal sound in music.
🌧️ Other melancholic sounds to explore
For a smooth jazz voicing, play the third–fifth–seventh in the right hand over the root in the left. A rootless voicing (flat third–fifth–flat seventh without the root) works well over a bass instrument. Add the 9th for richness — the minor ninth extends naturally from the minor seventh chord.
iim7 – V7 – Imaj7 (Jazz ii–V–I)vim7 – IVmaj7 – Imaj7 – V7 (Neo-soul)iim7 – V7sus4 – Imaj7 (Gospel ii–V–I)im7 – IVm7 – bVIImaj7 – bIIImaj7 (Minor jazz cycle)Connect your MIDI keyboard and play this chord — ChordBeam identifies it instantly