The Jazz Guitar Chord Dictionary
Reply to Thread Bookmark Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Posts 1 to 25 of 32
  1. #1

    User Info Menu

    This is a very general query but in what context might you use this chord?

  2.  

    The Jazz Guitar Chord Dictionary
     
  3. #2

    User Info Menu

    To annoy the neighbours?

  4. #3

    User Info Menu

    m7b9?

    Not sure it's terribly useful for anything. I'm sure someone will have a use for it though.

  5. #4

    User Info Menu

    Never seen one in The wild ...
    Could be a Phrigian type of Chord i suppose

    What song ?

  6. #5

    User Info Menu

    When you absolutely, positively, need to drive home the point that you want "PHRYGIAN, DAMMIT, NOT PHRYGIAN DOMINANT!"

  7. #6

    User Info Menu

    b9 is mostly a phrygian passing note.
    I can’t think of any extended m7b9 vamps.

  8. #7

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    This is a very general query but in what context might you use this chord?
    Having both a -3 and a -9 in a vertical structure is a sure path to unemployment. It does not sound good because it breaks the overtone series.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  9. #8
    Sure, Phrygian , but it also gives access to second-degree melodic minor as an option.

    Reg-centric viewpoint might be A-7b9 gives you "access to" Lydian dominant a third above...an outside, blue-note reference from which to target your A-7 chord. The b9 also "opens doors" for "access to" using Dorian b9 to play over A as a DOMINANT chord - within that mode - or to modal interchange with A altered.

    Down a third from A is F# super Locrian, which gives you "access to" F#-7b5 vocabulary from altered and F#7alt dominant vocabulary to target your Am7 chord.

    The real world answer is that this mode is little used, but playing around with it by borrowing from these other areas helps you at least learn to hear some of it. It's probably most useful to think of this chord as an upper diatonic relationship to altered or lower diatonic relationship to Lydian dominant.

  10. #9

    User Info Menu

    To me, Amin7b9 is most likely, simply FMaj7/A, until proved otherwise.

  11. #10
    Yeah. Chords don't generally happen in a vacuum .

    It's pretty helpful to practice soloing over individual chords a good bit, but most real world music is about context.

    If you want to develop or experiment with vocabulary and voicings around this sound from melodic minor, start with C7 Lydian dominant sounds over Am. Pretty easy to hear starting point. Then, try to resolve to.... and make A minor your tonal center.

    Then, do similar with F sharp altered.

    You can do the same with Phrygian , by developing Ionian voicings and vocabulary down the third or mixolydian up a third but target phrygian.

  12. #11

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    This is a very general query but in what context might you use this chord?
    How about you give us the context where you encountered it and then we can talk about it? Absent that, I'd say literally any chord could be used in any context depending on what sound you're trying to make. More narrowly, I can imagine playing a min9 chord, and moving the top voice chromatically down to a 1 (8ve), passing through the b9 en route to landing on a min or min7. But I probably wouldn't just hang out on a min7b9 chord unless I was trying to be dissonant.

    John

  13. #12

    User Info Menu

    The case can be made that Phrygian is the most metal of scales!


  14. #13

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    This is a very general query but in what context might you use this chord?
    Apparently not many of us would! The m7b9 is rare but exists as an altered chord.

    It could be played c5354x (Dm7b9) and resolved to x3243x (CM9) which is sort of okay if you don't mind the sound.

    In other words it could be used as a Dm7 with the added Eb supplying a passing note in a logical sequence.

    The same notes could also be seen as a Cm11 or Eb6 over D. Or Or maybe as a rootless G7#5sus. Treated as a Cm11/D it could resolve to x1323x (BbM7).

    If you have to solo over it use Bb major aka D Phrygian. That gives all the right notes.

  15. #14

    User Info Menu

    i know you asked about m7b9 well thats Emin in CMaj but not so easily handled.

    Now a sus chord with a b9, sounds good and is very usable, eg Gsusb9
    depending how you finger ( or leave out) is Ab lydian they are neigbours,
    it really captures Phrygian,

    hey did you say it is also Bb13..................... no i made that up

  16. #15

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by John A.
    How about you give us the context where you encountered it and then we can talk about it? Absent that, I'd say literally any chord could be used in any context depending on what sound you're trying to make. More narrowly, I can imagine playing a min9 chord, and moving the top voice chromatically down to a 1 (8ve), passing through the b9 en route to landing on a min or min7. But I probably wouldn't just hang out on a min7b9 chord unless I was trying to be dissonant.

    John
    To be honest, I haven't encountered the chord in a tune or anything. I was just noodling around and noticed that I hadn't really used that chord before (besides maybe using the b9 as a passing tone). Was just curious to see if there was an obvious use for it that I was missing.

  17. #16

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by matt.guitarteacher
    Sure, Phrygian , but it also gives access to second-degree melodic minor as an option.

    Reg-centric viewpoint might be A-7b9 gives you "access to" Lydian dominant a third above...an outside, blue-note reference from which to target your A-7 chord. The b9 also "opens doors" for "access to" using Dorian b9 to play over A as a DOMINANT chord - within that mode - or to modal interchange with A altered.

    Down a third from A is F# super Locrian, which gives you "access to" F#-7b5 vocabulary from altered and F#7alt dominant vocabulary to target your Am7 chord.

    The real world answer is that this mode is little used, but playing around with it by borrowing from these other areas helps you at least learn to hear some of it. It's probably most useful to think of this chord as an upper diatonic relationship to altered or lower diatonic relationship to Lydian dominant.
    I appreciate the answer! I'm just trying to wrap my head around this now. Modes sometimes turn my brain to mush.

  18. #17

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by bako
    b9 is mostly a phrygian passing note.
    I can’t think of any extended m7b9 vamps.
    I wouldn't wish a m7b9 vamp on my worst enemy.

  19. #18

    User Info Menu

    m7b9 is a dissonant sound. In a primarily consonant environment where dissonance quickly resolves,
    that is what is likely for this chord to do. In an environment of sustained crunchiness, this chord can
    hang around a bit longer.

  20. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    I appreciate the answer! I'm just trying to wrap my head around this now. Modes sometimes turn my brain to mush.
    Sure. Most of us as well. Taking things up or down a third is a great every point to more practical usages that don't do the brain fatigue thing as much. A phrygian is easier to hear as Fmaj7 over Am or C9 over Am in the beginning.

    A-7b9 isn't used much, but C9 type voicings over open A will soften it considerably and give your ear a starting context for hearing possible chord movements etc.

  21. #20

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    To be honest, I haven't encountered the chord in a tune or anything.
    That’s because it sounds like shite.

  22. #21

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by grahambop
    That’s because it sounds like shite.
    I'm starting to think it can actually sound cool in a flamenco way.

    Arpeggiate it!

    0.10.9.7.6.0

  23. #22

    User Info Menu

    Quote Originally Posted by YomGuitar
    To be honest, I haven't encountered the chord in a tune or anything. I was just noodling around and noticed that I hadn't really used that chord before (besides maybe using the b9 as a passing tone). Was just curious to see if there was an obvious use for it that I was missing.
    I can't think of a tune off the top of my head that has that chord written in it, but you could use it as a sub. For instance, the first two bars of Laura are | A-9 | D7b9 |. The melody moves between B and A# over that change. You could play it with an A- pedal point and ignore ignore the b9 of D7, and you'd kind of have | A-9 | A-9b5|. Decide for yourself how it sounds.

    John

  24. #23

    User Info Menu

    It's hard to weigh in on a thread about something that never gets used ever.

  25. #24

    User Info Menu

    Gm7b9 sounds like Bb7 with the 7th in the bass.

  26. #25

    User Info Menu

    Rick Beato likes his Phrygian. Plays some funky chords here.

    Last edited by BigDaddyLoveHandles; 10-20-2018 at 03:31 PM.