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Because chord scale theory does not include the structural importance of semitone resolutions in melodic lines.
In other words - leading notes (chromatic lower neighbours) resolving to chord tones ALWAYS sound good.
Also there are a great many jazz lines that include the line cliche 1-7-b7-6 over the minors in a ii-V-I and in their function as a relative minor.
I tend to regard the m7 chord as a suspension of the m6 - m6 and dom9 are intimately related. So it's not so much a ii-V-I as a Vsus-V-I or a ii7-ii6-I. Which basically means V-I of ii6-I. Transcriptions seem to bear out this kind of thinking, which I've heard talked about by Barry Harris among others.
Last edited by christianm77; 08-11-2013 at 09:54 AM.
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Or alternatively - who cares? You've noticed that major 7ths sound great on minor chords. That's what all the greats do. Stop worrying about it being 'right' and play some music :-)
Chunking, does it work for Jazz improv?
Today, 10:59 AM in Guitar Technique