Continuing our exploration of the minor jazz-blues progression I introduced last month, I’d like to now show you some cool variations on it that are sometimes used by jazz musicians and feature added chord changes and spicier harmony and voice-leading.
Continuing our exploration of the minor jazz-blues progression I introduced last month, I’d like to now show you some cool variations on it that are sometimes used by jazz musicians and feature added chord changes and spicier harmony and voice-leading.
What I’m going to do here is take the root-third-seventh (or root-seventh-third) “shell voicings” I presented last time and add what are called tension tones on top of them, such as the ninth, 13th or raised fifth.
We’ll also encounter some additional chords that are inserted into the progression, which add interesting root motion and present an improviser with more chord changes to melodically describe when soloing.
FIGURE 1 takes the basic minor jazz-blues changes we looked at last time and adds the ninth to the one chord, Em7, making it Em9 (theoretically spelled, E G B D F#). Notice that we’re leaving out the fifth, B, in the voicing of this chord, which not only lays better on the guitar but also makes for a tighter-sounding voicing. (Remember, sometimes less is more.)
Speaking of tightness, notice that we’re now using a sparse, punctuated comp (accompaniment) rhythm (optimally performed with hybrid picking), with lots of up-beat syncopation, as opposed to the traditional big-band–style “flat four” quarter-note strumming employed last time, which you could alternatively employ here. The B7#5 chords added in bars 1, 2 and 6 create harmonic activity and tension, by momentarily “backpedaling” through the cycle of fourths before resolving to Em9, the one chord.
The C#m7#5 chord in