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#350616 - 09/07/12 11:26 AM
Re: Chord substitutions...?
[Re: captain Russ]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
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Find as many of your favorite tunes as you can in a Bill Evans discography and then spend a day listening to them over and over and over. If you've got a good ear, you'll learn all you need to know.
With jazz chords, it sometimes depends on the instrument. For instance, jazz guitar chords tend to be voiced differently than jazz chords on a piano, and different still on a 'Rhodes'. For Rhodes, it's George Duke all the way for me.
I don't do substitutions as much as revoicings. There are just some jazz chords I tend to play in a certain way in certain keys....not a good thing, just habit and laziness. Like Tony, I'd be interested in learning a few new (easy) tricks, so let's have it, folks.
chas
Edited by cgiles (09/07/12 11:27 AM)
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
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#350624 - 09/07/12 02:06 PM
Re: Chord substitutions...?
[Re: tony mads usa]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/02/04
Posts: 7305
Loc: Lexington, Ky, USA
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Chas, you are right about inversions/re-voicing in jazz formats.
I was trying to pick something universal and simple to get my point across and encourage some examples.
Bill Evans was the master of inversions. I drive myself crazy trying to figure out what was going on in that brilliant, troubled head of his.
In pop and simpler formats, a simple substitution of a maj 7th can make all the difference in the world.
A lot of this comes down to personal style, as you point out in some of your chord preferences. I'm the same way.
Suggestions as to a stylistic approach to the assembly/choice of chords is equally valuable here.
For a simple example, our classic R&B C, Am, F and G. is often converted by orchestra and jazz players as a Cmaj 7, Am9, Dmin7th, G7. On guitar, this eliminates open chords and allows control of slides and sustains, classing the act up a little. And, if you learn that structure on guitar, you can easily play in different keys by simply starting the Cmaj7th form in the right position, as indicated by the bass note played on the A string.
As usual, Chas, it must be mental unity. Musically, you and I often think so much alike.
Anyone else....??????
Russ
Edited by captain Russ (09/07/12 02:11 PM)
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