The Jazz Guitar Chord Dictionary
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  1. #1

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    Jazz guys usually appear to be of the consensus that the III in minor is more of a tonic and that the VI is a pre-dominant. However, more than a few times I’ve seen some classical type musicians say that the III is more of a dominant and that the VI is a tonic.

    Can someone explain why I’m seeing different functions of these chords between jazz and classical guys?

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  3. #2

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    Which minor?

  4. #3
    Aeolian.

  5. #4
    Concerning the VI chord, I read that it contains a note from the iv chord so it could be considered pre-dominant because of that. I also read that since it’s a Tritone away from the ii that it could be considered pre-dominant. But that confuses me. I thought a tritone substitution was always a half step above the target chord. That would make it an Eb chord in the key of Am. It’s true that Ab is a tritone away from the ii chord though. I’m just not sure how that makes it pre-dominant.

  6. #5

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    Interesting, not sure if I know enough about classical functions to comment though. I see it the jazz way for sure.

  7. #6

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    I think the 'classical' approach is more based on taking the degrees of major

    I - T
    II- S
    III- D/T
    IV - S
    V - D
    VI - S
    VII - D

    And applying them to minor, regardless of chromatic alterations? So Ab in Cm is a Tonic function, in this understanding.

    For me, I can't help but hear that minor 6th - C-Ab as an unstable interval in the context of Cm. Much like the 4th in C major, it's consonant in isolation but dissonant or dissonant-seeming in context. So chords that have that note tend to sound subdominant or dominant in function.

    Here's another way of looking at it - minor as relative to major, so
    I, Am - VI of C - T
    II, Bm7b5 - VII of C - D
    III, C - I of C - T
    IV, Dm - II of C - S
    V, Em - III of C - D or T
    VI, F - IV of C - S
    VII, G(7) - V of C - D

    So (b)III and (b)VI are tonic and subdominant here.

    This seems a lot closer to how I hear it. But I don't know if classical guys ever think this way?

    Also, Erno Lendvai's pitch axis theory would class a bIII as Tonic function, and bVI chord as subdominant.
    Axis system - Wikipedia
    Last edited by christianm77; 12-15-2018 at 09:43 AM.

  8. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    Jazz guys usually appear to be of the consensus that the III in minor is more of a tonic and that the VI is a pre-dominant. However, more than a few times I’ve seen some classical type musicians say that the III is more of a dominant and that the VI is a tonic.

    Can someone explain why I’m seeing different functions of these chords between jazz and classical guys?
    Can someone explain why the III, which is CM7 in A aeolian, should be considered a dominant chord?

  9. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    However, more than a few times I’ve seen some classical type musicians say that the III is more of a dominant and that the VI is a tonic.
    This sounds like a description of MAJOR... Granted, minor CHORDS in a major KEY, but major nonetheless. I've never threads minor talked about that way, but there's a lot I haven't heard I guess. It would be helpful to have an actual source etc.

    Anyway, there's not really a III or VI in natural minor anyway. It's bIII and bVI.

  10. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by matt.guitarteacher
    This sounds like a description of MAJOR... Granted, minor CHORDS in a major KEY, but major nonetheless. I've never threads minor talked about that way, but there's a lot I haven't heard I guess. It would be helpful to have an actual source etc.

    Anyway, there's not really a III or VI in natural minor anyway. It's bIII and bVI.
    That’s what they mean.

    It is a thing - Unlocking the Mysteries of Diatonic Harmony - Art of Composing

  11. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by matt.guitarteacher
    This sounds like a description of MAJOR... Granted, minor CHORDS in a major KEY, but major nonetheless. I've never threads minor talked about that way, but there's a lot I haven't heard I guess. It would be helpful to have an actual source etc.

    Anyway, there's not really a III or VI in natural minor anyway. It's bIII and bVI.
    I thought it was obvious that I meant bIII and bVI.

    I've definitely read that a bIII can be a dominant. I'm not sure what they're on about. Other than that, it seems like a tonic.

    I'm mostly curious about the bVI stuff I posted above.

  12. #11

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    Well my approach is simple. In the key of C or Am, any chord with an F in is either subdominant or dominant in function, the latter if dissonant the former if consonant.

    Anything else is a tonic chord. That includes the G triad.

    But that’s my way of looking at it. So F is subdominant chord in both C and Am

  13. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by christianm77
    The minor chart on that page says exactly what I mean. III a dominant and VI a tonic.

    Chord functions of III and VI in minor key-functional-harmony-chart-minor-1024x486-jpg

    I wonder why it's different for classical.

    PS: On the major chart, I wonder why the iii can be a pre-dominant. Hmm...

  14. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    Since the bVI chord is a Tritone away from the ii, it can be considered pre-dominant. But that confuses me. I thought a tritone substitution was always a half step above the target chord. That would make it an Eb chord in the key of Am. It’s true that Ab is a tritone away from the ii chord though. I’m just not sure how that makes it pre-dominant.
    Can someone comment on this tritone thing?

  15. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    The minor chart on that page says exactly what I mean. III a dominant and VI a tonic.

    Chord functions of III and VI in minor key-functional-harmony-chart-minor-1024x486-jpg

    I wonder why it's different for classical.

    PS: On the major chart, I wonder why the iii can be a pre-dominant. Hmm...
    Clearly the minor is the same as major idea is quite a big deal in classical theory, it’s why they have harmonic minor. So it makes sense they would assume the minor degrees would have the same function.

    But I don’t know if it’s true for all versions of classical harmony. As I said if you look at minor as a part of the relative key, the jazz functions seem to come from there.

    Or Erno Lendvais theory.
    Last edited by christianm77; 12-15-2018 at 10:40 AM.

  16. #15

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    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    Concerning the VI chord, I read that it contains a note from the iv chord so it could be considered pre-dominant because of that. I also read that since it’s a Tritone away from the ii that it could be considered pre-dominant. But that confuses me. I thought a tritone substitution was always a half step above the target chord. That would make it an Eb chord in the key of Am. It’s true that Ab is a tritone away from the ii chord though. I’m just not sure how that makes it pre-dominant.
    Yeah I don’t think of it quite like that. I think ‘family of four’: there are four connected chords in C/Am for example:

    G7 Bm7b5 Dm7 Fmaj7

    These can be freely exchanged with one another

    Bm7b5 and Fmaj7 for instance

    All these chords have an F. They all have subdominant/dominant function which is kind of the same thing to an extent, you can regard a dominant chord as a dissonant subdominant chord.

    This reflects the weakened role of the non tonic chord tones in jazz. The D, A and B can all be blended into the tonic chord, but not the F

    Furthermore these chords are subject to tritone substitution and minor third relationships

  17. #16

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    Quote Originally Posted by thared33
    I thought it was obvious that I meant bIII and bVI.

    I've definitely read that a bIII can be a dominant. I'm not sure what they're on about. Other than that, it seems like a tonic.

    I'm mostly curious about the bVI stuff I posted above.

    Joe Mulholland and Tom Hojnacki explain it as follows:

    "Chords that contain scale degree b6 as a primary chord tone and do not include the leading tone are mostly responsible for the sub-dominant minor sound. This results in more subdominant options in minor key harmony than in major key."

    Sub-dominant chords from an Aeolian source, which can be used interchangeably in the pre-dominant position:

    II-7b5
    IV-7
    bVIMaj7

  18. #17

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    Sorry, no one's answered my question yet. How can a M7 chord be considered a dominant chord?

    (As someone's quite rightly pointed out there's the major family and dominant family. A M7 does not belong to the dominant family! The VI, on the other hand, is a bit dubious, as we know)

  19. #18

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    Quote Originally Posted by ragman1
    Sorry, no one's answered my question yet. How can a M7 chord be considered a dominant chord?

    (As someone's quite rightly pointed out there's the major family and dominant family. A M7 does not belong to the dominant family! The VI, on the other hand, is a bit dubious, as we know)

    Do we have a source other than the above post that posits that? I can't find one.

  20. #19

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jazzstdnt
    Joe Mulholland and Tom Hojnacki explain it as follows:

    "Chords that contain scale degree b6 as a primary chord tone and do not include the leading tone are mostly responsible for the sub-dominant minor sound. This results in more subdominant options in minor key harmony than in major key."

    Sub-dominant chords from an Aeolian source, which can be used interchangeably in the pre-dominant position:

    II-7b5
    IV-7
    bVIMaj7
    That’s very much how I hear it too. In A minor the Aeolian note is F, see above....

  21. #20

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    Quote Originally Posted by ragman1
    Sorry, no one's answered my question yet. How can a M7 chord be considered a dominant chord?

    (As someone's quite rightly pointed out there's the major family and dominant family. A M7 does not belong to the dominant family! The VI, on the other hand, is a bit dubious, as we know)
    I think in the classical world we wouldn’t be thinking of major sevenths but plain major chords.

  22. #21
    I think people mean the bIII triad is dominant rather than the extensions. I’m still wondering why that triad is considered dominant. I would also still like to hear more of an explanation for why the bVI is sometimes considered a tonic.

    And most importantly, I’ve read that the bVI is a tritone away from (or is the tritone substitute of?) the ii chord in both major and minor, so it’s considered pre-dominant. Can someone explain that?

  23. #22

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jazzstdnt
    Do we have a source other than the above post that posits that? I can't find one.
    Er...

    a few times I’ve seen some classical type musicians say that the III is more of a dominant

  24. #23

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    Quote Originally Posted by christianm77
    I think in the classical world we wouldn’t be thinking of major sevenths but plain major chords.
    Major, major7, major schmajor, a major is NOT a friggin' dominant chord.

  25. #24
    The bIII triad has only one note in common with the V so I'm still having trouble understanding. What progression are you playing there?

  26. #25

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    Quote Originally Posted by ragman1
    Major, major7, major schmajor, a major is NOT a friggin' dominant chord.
    What about when it’s on degree V of the major scale? A classical theorist would consider that a dominant chord.