The Jazz Guitar Chords Ebook
The Jazz Guitar Chords Ebook
The Jazz Guitar Chords Ebook
This ebook shows you how to construct jazz guitar chords and how to play
them on guitar. If you’d like to go more advanced, I can wholeheartedly
recommend you the Jazz Theory Book.
The Theory
p.2 …………………………………………………. Jazz Guitar Chord Theory
C Major Scale C D E F G A B
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
All chords are based on thirds and there are 2 kinds of thirds (or 3rds) :
Let's start by stacking 2 thirds on the first note (1) of the C major scale:
C E G
1 3 5
D F A
1 b3 5
Let’s skip a few notes and stack thirds on the 7 of the C major scale:
B D F
1 b3 b5
1 C E G 1 3 5 C major C
2 D F A 1 b3 5 D minor Dm or D- or Dmin
3 E G B 1 b3 5 E minor Em or E- or Emin
4 F A C 1 3 5 F major F
5 G B D 1 3 5 G major G
6 A C E 1 b3 5 A minor Am or A- or Amin
7 B D F 1 b3 b5 B diminished Bdim or B°
1. Find the major scale of a given key. If you don’t know how to do
this, learn it here: How To Construct a Major Scale. If you need to
find the notes of a Gm chord then find the G major scale : G A B C
D E F#
3. Apply the chord formula to the major chord. The chord formula
for minor chords is 1 b3 5. This means the 3rd of the major chord
has to be lowered half a note : G Bb D
C Major Scale C D E F G A B
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
C E G B
1 3 5 7
Let's do the same for the 2nd note of the C major scale:
D F A C
1 b3 5 b7
Let's skip some notes and stack 3 thirds on top of the 5th note of the C
major scale:
G B D F
1 3 5 b7
We'll skip some more notes and stack 3 thirds on top of the 7th note of the
C major scale:
B D F A
1 b3 b5 b7
I'll summarize and complete the other notes of the C major scale :
1 C E G B 1 3 5 7 C major 7 Cmaj7
Dm7 or D-7 or
2 D F A C 1 b3 5 b7 D minor 7
Dmin7
Em7 or E-7 or
3 E G B D 1 b3 5 b7 E minor 7
Emin7
4 F A C E 1 3 5 7 F major 7 Fmaj7
5 G B D F 1 3 5 b7 G dominant G7
Am7 or A-7 or
6 A C E G 1 b3 5 b7 A minor 7
Amin7
B half Bm7b5 or
7 B D F A 1 b3 b5 b7
diminished Bmin7b5
Tensions are notes that are part of a chord, but are not chord tones (1
3 5 7).
C Major Scale C D E F G A B
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
C E G B
1 3 5 7
There are 3 notes left in the major scale that are not chord tones : 2, 4
and 6. If we add these tones to the chord, they become tensions. Most of
the time we play tensions an octave higher then the chord tones because
else they might get in the way of the chord tones (the chord would sound
‘muddy’ most of the time). That's also the way they are notated: 2
becomes 9 (2+7(one octave)=9), 4 becomes 11 and 6 becomes 13.
C E G B D
1 3 5 7 9
The two other notes that are left, the 4 and 6, are special cases in
combination with a major chord. They are avoid notes: notes that are a
half tone above a chord tone. Avoid notes sound disharmonic so they are
almost never used.
If we have a look at the 4 of the C major scale we notice that it is a half note
The 6 is also a special case in combination with major chords. Most of the
times when we add a 6 to a major chord, the 7 is omitted and there is no
octave added to the 6. This is because the 6 and 7 might get in each other's
way.
C E G A
1 3 5 6
D F A B
1 b3 5 6
D F A C G
1 b3 5 b7 11
G C D F A
1 4 5 b7 9
There's also a thing called altered tensions (b9, #9, b5, b13). This topic is
covered later in another lesson.
2 Cmaj9
4 / avoid note.
Major #4 Cmaj7#11 #11 comes out
of lydian scale
6 C6 omitted 7
2 Cm9
Minor 4 Cm11
6 Cm6 omitted 7
2 C9
b2 and #2 come
b2 C7(b9)
out of altered scale
#2 C7#9
Dominant
4 C7sus4
Major Triad 1 3 5
Minor Triad 1 b3 5
Diminished Triad 1 b3 b5
Augmented Triad 1 3 #5
Major 7 1 3 5 7
Minor 7 1 b3 5 b7
Dominant 7 1 3 5 b7
Half Diminished 7 1 b3 b5 b7
Diminished 7 1 b3 b5 bb7
Augmented 7 1 3 #5 b7
Suspended 4 1 4 5 b7
minor/major 7 1 b3 5 7
The first step is memorizing the chords and chord tones of the C major
scale and the chord formula's:
Cmaj7 C E G B
Dm7 D F A C
Em7 E G B D
Fmaj7 F A C E
G7 G B D F
Am7 A C E G
Bm7b5 B D F A
2. Now that you know the chords of C major, it's easy to find chords of
other keys.
One thing you need to know is that not every chord tone is equally
important :
Another thing you need to know is that 1 half note equals one fret on the
guitar.
X15135 : C
You see that it is ok to duplicate chord tones, like the 1 and the 5 in our
example, but this may sound a bit sluggish.
X15735 : Cmaj7
X1379X : Cmaj9
We exchanged the 5th on the D-string for the 3rd and we changed the 3rd
on the B-string to a 9.
This would be a nice chord if you're playing bossa nova, solo guitar or in
duo setting, but if you play with a bass player and you don't want to get in
his way, it's better to omit the root and to play on the higher strings only:
Instead of playing the root of the chord, we now play the 5th on the high E-
string.
A chord like this is called a chord inversion: a chord that has a note
other than the root in the bass.
In our example we have got a Cmaj9 chord with the 3rd (E) in the bass.
XX3b795 : C9/E
XXb3b795 : Cm9/E
Here’s an exercise for you: I give you some chords and you need to find the
chord notes (the solutions are on the next page) :
Gm7 :
Abmaj7 :
C#maj7 :
A9sus4 :
B7 :
Edim7 :
Gdim7 :
D7b9 :
D#m7b5 :
Dmaj7 :
Gm7 : G Bb D F
Abmaj7 : Ab C Eb G
C#maj7 : C# E# G# B#
A9sus4 : A D E G B
B7 : B D# F# A
Edim7 : E G Bb Db
Gdim7 : G Bb Db E
D7b9 : D F# A C Eb
D#m7b5 : D# F# A C#
Dmaj7 : D F# A C#
Did you pass the test? If not I suggest you reread the entire tutorial once
again very slowly and make sure you understand all the parts.
That was it for the theoretical part. If you’d like to know more about jazz
music theory, there’s a book I can strongly recommend you (it’s the jazz
theory bible): The Jazz Theory book by Mark Levine
The next part is all about jazz chords on the guitar: the basic jazz guitar
chord charts. These charts are essential knowledge and a good starting
point for beginning jazz guitarists.
The best way to memorize chords is by actually using them. Here’s a list of
the most popular jazz chord progressions. By playing chord progressions
you see the chords in relation to each other, what makes it easier to
memorize them.
The next step is playing jazz standards.For the most popular and most
played jazz standards you’ll have to buy yourself a Real book, the bible of
every jazz musician.
I suggest you flip the page and get your fingers going.
Enjoy!
The Jazz Guitar Chord in Fourths: about the construction of quartal voicings
Basic Chord Inversions: basic chord voicings & inversions
Blues Chord Progressions & Variations: variations on the 12 bar blues
Jazz Chord Progressions: the most popular chord progressions in jazz
Tritone Chord Substitution: theory, diagrams & examples
Blues Chord Progressions: variations on the 12 bar blues progression
Rhythm Changes: a guide to rhythm changes on the guitar
Walking Bass: learn to walk on your guitar
Steely Dan Chords: the mu major chord
Recommended eBook:
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