The E diminished triad stacks two minor thirds—from E to G (three semitones) and from G to B♭ (three more semitones). This symmetrical construction creates a tritone between root and fifth, producing maximum instability. Unlike major and minor triads that contain a perfect fifth, the diminished fifth removes the sense of stability.
Harmonic Function
In diatonic harmony, the diminished triad appears naturally on the seventh degree of major scales (vii°). It functions as a leading-tone chord, strongly pulling toward the tonic. Diminished chords are also used as chromatic passing chords to create smooth voice leading between diatonic harmonies, adding color and tension to progressions.
Resolution Patterns
The E diminished chord most commonly resolves by moving each voice by a semitone or whole step to a nearby consonant chord. In practice, it often resolves up by a half step to a major or minor chord. Composers from Bach to modern film scorers use diminished chords to create dramatic tension, suspense, and harmonic surprise in their progressions.