A Crash Course in Chord/Scales
A Crash Course in Chord/Scales
A Crash Course in Chord/Scales
Jazz harmony is extracted from beginning scales on different pitches to evoke different sounds.
& 44 œ œ ww œ œ ww
- Dorian Mode
œ œ œ œ œ œ
œ œ œ ww œ œ œ ww
This means you should play Ionian mode play Dorian mode over a -7 (minor 7) chord
over a ma7 chord
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3. Phrygian Mode 5. Mixolydian Mode
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4. Lydian Mode F ma7(#11) G7
œ œ œ w œ œ
&œœœœœ ww œ œ œœ œ
5
œ w
E 7(b9,#9)
w œ w
This mode is uncommon, but play Lydian over a ma7(#11) chord play Mixolydian over a 7 chord
can be played over a 7 chord w/ can be used in place of Ionian sometimes
altered extensions.
œ œ œ œ www œ œ œ ww
6. Natural Minor - Aolean Mode
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A -7(b6) B -7(b5)
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7. Locrian Mode
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11
This mode is uncommon. Can be played in play Locrian over a half-diminished chord, aka -7(b5)
place of Dorian, if the song is in a minor key.
w ww b www w w
ww
w
Compared to a C Major Scale, a ma7 chord has no alterations. A dominant (7) chord will have a flat 7.
A minor 7 (-7) chord has a flat 3 & 7. A half-diminished (-7b5) chord has a flat 3, 5, & 7. When fully diminished,
the 7 is flatted twice. Any information in parenthesis is a specific alteration to a mode, usually referring to the upper
extensions of a chord*, such as the 9, 11, & 13.
Notice that it is often the 3 & the 7 altering when the chord changes.
*If one were to keep stacking a chord in thirds after 1, 3, 5, & 7, the 2, 4, 6 would wind up on top of the chord.
Since they are now above 7, we refer to them as 9, 11, & 13.
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Guide Tones
We call the 3 & 7 Guide Tones for this reason. They help guide us from one sound to another.
D -7 G7 C ma7
& ww ww w
21
7
3
3
7
7
3 w
This progression is the most common progression in Jazz Harmony, the II-V-I.
Notice that all of these chords use modes from the same major scale.
We use brackets and arrows when analyzing jazz harmony to indicate these relationships.
II-7 V7 Ima7
24
&| | |
7 Chords are interchangeable with a 7 chord a tritone away, because their guide tones are the same notes!
G7 D b7
& ˙˙ ˙˙
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3 7
7 3
When a II-V-I is using a Tritone Substitution, we show it with a dotted bracket & arrow.
G -7 G b7 F ma7
& b ˙˙ ˙ ww
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˙
Solid and dotted brackets and arrows can be mixed and match for some interesting paths to I
B b-7 A7 D ma7
& b b ˙˙
29
˙
#˙ # # ww
F #-7 B7 B bma7
& ˙˙ ˙ w
31
#˙ Nw
3
Analyzing is important, because you need to know why chords move the
way they do. If you know how chords function, they become easier to
condense and simplify when you're improvising!
D -7 G7
& ˙˙ ˙˙ ww
33
Some FAQs
If I can superimpose Mixolydian over Dorian, why not just play Ionian for the whole progression?
It's all coming from the same base scale, right?
You could do that, but there would be no sense of tension and release in your playing. V7 chords
build tension that want to return to Ima7. If you imply Ima7 over the whole thing, your playing
will lack direction and motion.
Just like any form of art, the artist creates conflict and then resolves it!
| V --> I | Dominant --> Tonic | Tension ---> Release | Conflict ---> Conclusion | Life ---> Death | Dark ---> Light |
*Superimposition refers to playing taking a sound from one mode/chord and playing it OVER another sound/chord.
4
Test Your Knowledge
Build the chords indicated by the changes, and write the mode to use over each chord.
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Provide the appropriate brackets and arrows for the following chord progressions.
Write in the Guide Tones in the staff below.
EX G -7 C7 F ma7 12 C -7 B7 B bma7
& b ˙˙ ˙ ww
50
˙
13 F #-7 B7 B bma7 14 A -7 A b7 D bma7
&
15 B -7 E7 A7 16 A -7 A b7 G ma7
&
17 G -7 C7 B ma7 18 B -7 B b7 A ma7
&