Leading Tone Calculator

Leading Tone Calculator

Find the scale degree 7 spelling, semitone pull, tonic resolution, seventh-chord option, and applied leading tone for major, minor, modal, or chromatic harmony.

🎼 Leading Tone Presets

Preset use: Load a real theory situation, then adjust tonic, tonality, harmonic target, spelling policy, chord form, register, and resolution style.

🎹 Harmony Inputs
The note that receives the leading-tone resolution.
Major and harmonic minor contain a true leading tone.
Raised 7 creates the semitone pull to tonic.
Changes the chord spelling and function label.
Used when the function is applied or secondary.
Theory spelling keeps degree 7 as the letter below tonic.
Used for MIDI pitch, staff range, and interval display.
Leading tones normally resolve upward by semitone.
Leading Tone
B
scale degree 7 in C major
Resolution
B4 to C5
up by one semitone
Chord Option
B-D-F
vii diminished triad
Pull Strength
Strong
semitone below tonic

Calculation Breakdown

📊 Comparison Spec Grid
7 to 1
Scale degree motion
m2
Resolution interval
71 to 72
MIDI pitch motion
Tonal
Function status
📘 Leading Tone By Key
Resolution KeyMajor Leading ToneMinor Raised 7Natural Subtonic
CB to CB to CBb to C
GF# to GF# to GF to G
DC# to DC# to DC to D
AG# to AG# to AG to A
ED# to ED# to ED to E
FE to FE to FEb to F
BbA to BbA to BbAb to Bb
EbD to EbD to EbDb to Eb
📐 Mode And Minor Comparison
ContextSeventh DegreeDistance To TonicCommon Use
Major / IonianNatural leading tone1 semitoneAuthentic cadences and tonal melodies
Harmonic minorRaised 71 semitoneMinor-key V and vii diminished chords
Melodic minor ascendingRaised 71 semitoneSmoother minor melodic ascent
Natural minor / AeolianSubtonic2 semitonesModal color or descending minor lines
DorianSubtonic unless raised2 or 1 semitonesModal writing or borrowed cadential pull
MixolydianFlat 7 subtonic2 semitonesDominant-mode color without leading pull
🎶 Leading-Tone Chord Reference
HarmonyFormula Above Leading ToneExample In CResolution Habit
Scale degree 7single toneBUsually rises to C
vii diminished triad1, b3, b5B-D-FRoot rises, tritone resolves inward
vii half-diminished 71, b3, b5, b7B-D-F-ACommon in major keys
vii fully diminished 71, b3, b5, bb7B-D-F-AbCommon in harmonic minor and modulations
Dominant seventh3rd of V7B inside G-B-D-FThird of V rises to tonic
Applied vii chordleading tone to targetF#-A-C to GTemporarily tonicizes another degree
🔍 Common Project Examples
Musical SettingInput ContextLeading Tone ResultBest Reading
Classical cadenceC major, V7 to IB to CStrong tonal resolution
Minor-key cadenceA harmonic minorG# to ARaised seventh supplies pull
Modal folk lineE Phrygian natural 7 policyD to ESubtonic color, not true leading tone
Secondary dominant areaV of V in CF# to GApplied pull toward dominant
Choir alto lineBb major cadenceA to BbSmall upward semitone needs clean tuning
Spelling tip: A leading tone is named from its resolution. If the tonic is Db, the leading tone is C, not B#, because the letter below D is C.
Minor tip: Natural minor has a subtonic a whole step below tonic. Raise scale degree 7 when the phrase needs V or vii harmony to pull home.

The leading tone is an specific note within a musical scale. This particular note is important in tonal music because the leading tone help the music to create a sense of arrival. The leading tone creates a sense of tension within the music because the leading tone normaly rest a semitone below the tonic note.

The resolution to this tension occur when the leading tone moves up by a semitone to reach the tonic note. When the seventh degree of a musical scale move to the tonic note within that scale, the listener experiences a sense of completion. This sense of completion within listeners occur because the leading tone naturaly creates a sense of tension that resolve into a feeling of arrival within the listener.

How the Leading Tone Works and How to Use the Calculator

A person must understand the difference between a leading tone and a subtonic within a scale. A leading tone and a subtonic is different in that each of them have a different distance from the tonic note within a scale. In a major key, the seventh degree of a scale is a leading tone because it is a semitone below the tonic note.

In a natural minor key, the seventh degree of a scale is a subtonic because it is a whole step below the tonic note. Because the subtonic does not create the same sense of arrival as does the leading tone, the subtonic creates the arrival in the music to sound more soft. In a harmonic minor key, the musician raises the seventh degree of a scale to create a leading tone similar to that of a major key.

Modal scales, like the Dorian and the Mixolydian modes, contains a lowered seventh degree which creates a subtonic. The decision to use a leading tone or a subtonic in a musical composition will determine whether the music sound tonal or modal. The calculator included at the top of this page will help you to manage the mathematical distances of each of these scale notes, as well as help you to manage the spelling of each of these notes.

To use the calculator, all you must do is enter the tonic note, mode, and function of the chord you are create within your composition. The calculator will output for you whether the seventh degree of your scale should rise or stay flat. Furthermore, the calculator will also output for you the quality of chord that should follow the degree of the seventh note in your composition.

Additionally, the calculator will also output for you how the choice of the seventh degree will affect the chord within your composition. For example, if you change the minor policy from auto to raise, the calculator will change the subtonic to a leading tone, as well as change the chord spelling from a major or minor chord to a diminished chord. Besides understanding the difference between leading tones and subtonics, you can also use leading tones to point towards other scale degree besides the tonic note.

Furthermore, you can also use leading tones to create secondary dominants and vii chords. There is also a target selector within the calculator that will allow you to see how the leading tone can resolve to the dominant note instead of the tonic note. The spelling preference will allow you to keep the note letters correct in your composition.

The correct note letters will allow for clean voice leading in your composition. The register choice allow you to choose in which range you would like to place the leading tone within your composition. However, the register does not have an effect upon the leading tone itself.

Many people tend to make mistake with these notes and their functions within a composition. One common mistake is treating every seventh degree note in a composition as if it is the same note. For instance, many singers will flatten a leading tone because it is easier to sing a lowered note.

However, flattening the leading tone will make the singer lose the cadence in the song. Another example of a mistake is a guitarist who may choose to play a subtonic in a rock composition. The guitarist may make this mistake because of the groove and the feel of the genre of rock music.

However, playing a subtonic note will cause the song to lack a sense of punch when it resolve to the final chord. The calculator will help to prevent these types of mistake. The calculator will tell the musician the distance of each note in the composition in semitones, as well as the quality of the chord that result from each note choice.

Although the musician will still have to make the decision of whether they wish to use the modal coloring or the tonal pull of the leading tone, the calculator will help to show the musician the number behind these two options. Another consideration of leading tones is the resolution of that leading tone to the tonic note. Leading tones will naturally tend to resolve up to the tonic by a semitone.

However, other resolution styles exist which will delay the resolution of this leading tone. For example, a suspension or a deceptive motion can occur which will delay the leading tone to its goal note. The resolution selector within the calculator will account for these resolution style.

Thus, the output of the calculator will reflect the resolution of the leading tone within the composition. As long as the tendency tone note eventually resolve to its goal note, clean voice leading is attainable. Leading tones allow a musician and composer to hear the difference between tension and color within a composition.

The raised seventh note in a composition will normally create a sense of urgency, whereas a lowered seventh note will create a sense of weight within that composition. Knowing the difference between a raised seventh note and a lowered seventh note allows the composer and musician to use the calculator as a tool to double-check their work. While the ear will make the final decision as to the resolution of each leading tone within a composition, the calculator will allow the composer to have the musical options clear within their mind prior to begin to rehearse the composition.

Leading Tone Calculator

Leave a Comment