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#195384 - 01/04/05 10:00 PM
Re: "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye" Rediscovered
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Senior Member
Registered: 02/04/01
Posts: 2071
Loc: Fruita, Colorado, USA
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C is the easiest key. So in C you play the C# chord which is the flated 2 chord with a 7th and a #9th. Thus the notes are C#,F, Ab, B, E, = bII7#9 or C#7#9 (Db7#9)
Are you making fun of me? That is the beautiful chord right before the I, Tonic, or Root chord what ever you call it. Use this right before every root chord in the tune. Yes! even at the end of the bridge. This chord is the reason I like the tune.
If you do jazz you get to use the bII7#9 chord a lot. If you only do pop tunes in general you only get to use it on "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye" and maybe in the last 60 years you might fine one more Pop tune that might use it, but I doubt it.
For horn players Jazz is where it's at. Ask Dexter, Coltrane, Rollins, Griffin, Gerry Mulligan.
There are lots of pop tunes I enjoy playing and singing along with the keyboard. But when a musician walks in he listens a lot closer if you pick up you horn and improvise on "All The Things You are" and it's not just the same old blues licks that you play on a blues chart.
I'm talking horn players. So don't you one man band guys get your feathers ruffled.
Dave does Nightengale Sang In Berkley Square. On it and other tunes like that you can always use the bII7#9 before the ending tonic, root chord. It sounds great when you retard at the end and use it. It just doesn't fit on Blueberry Hill and Stormy Monday.
Try using the bII7#9 on an ending, and instead of the tonic chord if the ending melody note is the tonic note, play the raised 5 chord before the ending tonic chord.
For example, in C insted of the same old V7 chord before the C at the end of a tuen, substitute the bII7#9 for the V7 chord and then use the Ab and while holding the tonic melody with your voice resolve to the tonic chord which is C in the key of C. Make sure the ending melody note is the tonic note C when you hit the Ab chord.
I sure hope you're not making fun of me Glenn. That's not very nice. I'm almost as old as Gary you know?
This chord substitution is elaborated about in a book I mentioned before. It's called Inside Outside" by Bunky Green. You can get it from Jamie Abersole.
If you're serious about music you should get it. It will explain in 10 pages what you may not learn in a life time of just playing gigs unless you're working with someone of Bunky's caliber which is gonna be hard to do/
_________________________
I'm not prejudiced, I hate everybody!! Ha ha! My Sister-In-Law had this tee shirt. She was a riot!!!
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