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My favorite straight dom 7 shape is still the classic barre chord, minus the bottom two strings. If you just barre the top four, you can hammer the 3rd string with a fury using your middle finger for nice effect. Plus it puts the classic pentatonic/blues box right underneath your fingers, which is kinda the easiest box to work effectively.
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10-27-2024 09:55 AM
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Originally Posted by brent.h
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jazz-shell-inversions.pdf
I made this for a student a few months ago.
For the passing diminished chords major 6 would work better than major 7, but that’s the same voicings as the minor 7. I wrote Cm7, but those would double as Eb6. I wrote Cm7b5 but those double as Eb-6.
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Perhaps this book, too, might be interesting (for Blues grooves etc.)
Ulf Wakenius Oscar Peterson Licks For Jazz Guitar
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
Also, learn those grips Peter posted. Just one at a time, play through that list as a warm up. Get as far as you get in 5 or 10 minutes and move on.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
But yeah. I would say learn them all from the root pretty quick.
As you get into it more, learn them from the fifth in the order that you use them. In this case that probably means dominant, then minor 7, then m7b5, then major 7.
Just that gives you tons and tons and stuff to work with. You could live there for a very long time.
From there add the thirds, also in order that you’ll actually use them.
Sevenths last. They tend to be less useful. Major 7 probably not at all.
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Below is Barry Harris' Dominant 7th Diminished Scale of Chords (adapted to the Freddie Green style). It alternates between the G7 chord and the A diminished chord.
Typically, these chords are played in drop 2 voicings (4 adjacent strings), but we're gonna skip the 5th string because chunka-chunka.
dom: 3x34xx
dim: 5x45xx
dom: 7x57xx (you're correct; there is no F in this shell)
dim: 8x78xx
dom: 10x9,10xx
dim: 11x10,11xx
dom: 13x12,12xx
dim: 14x13,14xx
Enjoy!Last edited by brent.h; 10-28-2024 at 09:46 AM. Reason: typos; it's corrected now
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14 x 13 14 x x
for that last one
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Originally Posted by brent.h
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
for some reason I caught the typo where the last chord is off by a fret on one note, but not the actual text of the post where it has the wrong chord
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
Sorry about that.
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Okay, now that we are past that.
If I switch from G7 to GM7, G-7 or Gm7b5, do I keep pairing them all to the A diminished chord?
Apologies to the OP for hijacking the thread.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
The exception is Gmaj7. There are ways to get that chord cooking, but the operative thing is that since the chord contains the 7th, you don't get the usual eight-note scale by adding the diminished that contains that degree. So you'd use major 6 instead. But the nice thing is that you just use the minor 7 and don't need a new diminished.
Gm7 + A dim = G A Bb C D Eb F F#
Bb6 + C dim = Bb C D Eb F F# G A
Half-diminished has the same relationship to m6
Gm7(b5) = Bbm6Last edited by pamosmusic; 10-28-2024 at 06:10 PM.
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Ah, I see. I wrote out my GM7 as G B D F# and didn't catch F# and Gb being the same thing.
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Also, thanks so much for all the useful info that's been shared in this thread - tonnes of stuff to think about!
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Originally Posted by garybaldy
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Originally Posted by brent.h
My point being, if I had learned the names of the chords you listed instead of just the grips, I would have known what was happening.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
If you’d just played the real book changes you’d have been fine. This happens all the time where you basically got copied and pasted from the saxophone voicings, almost certainly.
Measure 48 is using secondary dominants as passing chords
Measure 49 is what you’re referring to here, often called by arrangers “mechanical voicing” where the passing notes are harmonized with diminished seventh chords that pull to the chord they’re trying to reach.
Measure 50 is diatonic passing chords just walking up a scale, probably with the melody.
Measure 52 and 59 you see some tritone dominants that sound like side-slipping because of the root motion.
Measure 54 is a little weirder but that’s not a wholly bizarre embellishment chord for Dm. You see it tunes like Angel Eyes and Cry Me a River.
Point being these are all textbook (literally) ways of harmonizing non chord tones in soli writing.
If someone handed this to me to sight read I would clock that go “lol no” and then just play the changes I know for Fly Me to the Moon. I’d then pencil in circles on the spots where it’s a whole band hit. My guess is the Bb7 in m 54 would be one I’d like to play with the band, for example. But hard to know without hearing it.
I hate the way arrangers write guitar parts. (Or the way the seem to refuse to write actual guitar parts.)
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This whole site is great btw
Big Band Arranging | 13 | Soli Writing — Evan Rogers | Orchestrator | Arranger | Conductor
I read this entire blog series a few months ago when I was starting to arrange for my fifth graders because I was a little rusty. I guess I had a good bit of background with arranging so a lot of this was review, but I think it’s laid out really well and would be good for someone who wants to understand big band writing.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
The more you play charts like this, the more you get use to these moves.
The Barry Harris maj6-dim drop chord stuff was all taken from 40s big band arranging. IIRC George Shearing was the first pianist to apply it in his piano stylings, and Barry was influenced by him. So it's no surprise it shows up in big band charts.
Depending on the pianist, I would mostly pared down voicings.
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I've hired the pianist for my quartet, he's excellent and a music teacher, so that's why I felt comfortable approaching him.
Anyway, I feel like with these charts, the arranger has some specific guitar moves or tenor lines they want and, if they'd just notate the melody or diads they want me to play on the 3rd or 4th string, it would be easier. If I really work at these, I'll find a spot where a bar lays nicely on the guitar and then the step wise voice leading is right there. But, learning 7 songs at a time, I forget them faster than I can learn them.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Simple Cross Rhythms
Today, 12:57 PM in Improvisation