Directory
Browse all concepts
310 notes across 9 areas. Jump to a topic, or use the 3D graph to explore by connection.
index
1Start-here maps that organize the whole wiki.
foundations
53The core building blocks — pitch, scales, intervals, and how chords are made.
An accidental is a symbol that changes a note's pitch away from what the key signature would otherwise give it. Music needs this because the chromatic scale has twelve pitches per…
Start from Chord Tones: a basic seventh chord is built by stacking thirds — root, 3rd, 5th, 7th. Nothing stops you from continuing the stack. Keep piling up thirds past the 7th and…
An inversion tells you one thing and one thing only: which note of the chord is sitting in the bass. That's it. Not how the upper notes are stacked, not how many notes are doubled,…
A chord symbol is a compressed instruction, not a full score. It tells a player the root, the quality, any extensions or alterations, and sometimes a bass note — and then gets out…
A chord symbol like Cmaj7 isn't a suggestion — it's a specific set of four notes: C, E, G, B. Those four notes, the root, 3rd, 5th, and 7th, are the chord's chord tones. Everything…
Play C and G together. It sounds hollow, stable, almost architectural — a bare open fifth. Now play C and F♯: it buzzes, wants to move, feels unresolved. That difference — stable v…
Diatonic harmony is what happens when you build chords using only the notes that already belong to a key. Pick a scale, stack thirds on top of every scale degree, and you get a fam…
Stack three minor thirds on top of each other and you get the diminished seventh chord: 1–♭3–♭5–♭♭7. In C that's C–E♭–G♭–B𝄫. Nobody actually writes B𝄫 (double-flat B) on a lead s…
Take a G7 chord and resolve it to C. Something in your ear relaxes — a held breath let go. That feeling is dominant resolution, and it's the single strongest piece of motion in ton…
Take a major triad and stack a minor 7th on top instead of a major one, and you get the most important chord in the jazz vocabulary: the dominant seventh. G7 is G–B–D–F. C7 is C–E–…
Dorian is the sound of a minor chord that doesn't want to resolve anywhere. It's a minor scale, but a brighter one — and that one difference in color is why it became the default f…
Sit at a piano and press the black key between C and D. Is that C♯ or D♭? The honest answer is: the key doesn't care, but the music does. This is enharmonic equivalence — two diffe…
Every scale, chord, and melodic line in jazz is built from just two distances: the half step and the whole step. Get these two intervals into your ear and your hands, and you have…
Take a minor seventh chord and drop the fifth by a half step, and you get the half-diminished chord — a sound that's darker and more unsettled than plain minor, but not as unstable…
Interval inversion is what happens when you flip an interval upside down — take the bottom note and put it on top (or the top note underneath), usually by moving it an octave. It s…
An interval is just the distance between two notes — how far one pitch sits from another. Everything you play or hear in jazz is built from these distances: a chord is a stack of i…
A key signature is a shorthand: instead of writing a sharp or flat next to a note every single time it appears, you declare it once, at the start of the staff, and it holds for the…
A lead sheet is the minimum viable score for a jazz tune: one line of melody, a string of Chord Symbols above it, sometimes lyrics below. That's it. It exists because jazz assumes…
Lydian is what the major scale sounds like when you let go of gravity. Raise the 4th degree and the pull toward the tonic softens into something bright, weightless, and hanging — t…
A major seventh chord is the sound of arriving home and being allowed to relax there. Take a major triad and stack a major 7th on top instead of the more common minor 7th, and you…
Stack a minor triad and add a minor 7th on top, and you get the workhorse chord of jazz harmony: stable enough to sit on, colored enough to keep your ear interested. It's the sound…
Mixolydian is what happens when you take a major scale and flatten the 7th degree. That one change turns a bright, resolved major sound into something that wants to move, hangs in…
Take a single set of seven notes and start it on a different degree each time, and you get seven different scales, each with its own gravity and mood. That's the whole trick behind…
Two keys can be "related" in two completely different ways, and mixing them up is the single most common source of confusion in beginning theory. Parallel keys share a tonic but sw…
Pitch is just frequency — how fast a sound wave vibrates — and the chromatic scale is what you get when you divide one octave of pitch into the smallest steps Western music uses: t…
Roman numeral analysis names a chord by its scale-degree role — I, ii, V — instead of its absolute letter name. That single move is why it exists: Dm7–G7–Cmaj7 and Fm7–B♭7–E♭maj7 a…
Scale degrees are the numbered addresses of notes in a scale, counted from the tonic (the "home" note, degree 1). They exist so musicians never have to think in absolute pitch name…
A seventh chord is a triad with one more note stacked on top: another third, landing a 7th above the root. That single added note is why jazz doesn't really run on triads the way c…
A sixth chord is a triad with a major 6th stacked on top instead of a 7th. It became the go-to tonic sound of The Swing Era because it gives you a fully resolved, no-tension "home"…
A suspended chord takes an ordinary triad and knocks out its third, replacing it with a note a step away — usually the perfect fourth. In classical harmony that fourth was a "suspe…
Tension and release is the engine that makes music feel like it's going somewhere. An unstable sound creates a "pull," and a stable sound answers it — that pull-and-answer cycle is…
The Circle of Fifths is a map of all twelve pitches arranged by the interval that binds Western tonal music together: the perfect fifth. It looks like a clock face and gets taught…
Minor keys have a problem: The Natural Minor Scale contains no leading tone, so its five-chord is minor and refuses to pull toward home the way a dominant should. The harmonic mino…
The leading tone is the 7th degree of the scale — the note sitting a half step below the tonic — and it is the single strongest engine of pull in tonal music. Because it's so close…
The major scale is the ruler jazz musicians measure everything against. Every chord extension you'll ever name — a 9th, an 11th, a ♯11, a ♭13 — is defined as a distance from this s…
Take a minor scale, raise the 6th and 7th degrees, and you get something strange: a scale that's really just a major scale with a flattened 3rd. That one move quietly solved a cent…
The natural minor scale is the sound of minor in its plainest form — no altered notes, no borrowed tension, just the dark mirror image of The Major Scale. It's also the baseline ev…
The tritone splits the octave exactly in half—six semitones up, six down, no favoritism. That perfect symmetry is what makes it the least stable interval in Western music: your ear…
Tonality is the gravity that holds a piece of music together: one pitch acts like "home," and every other note and chord gets its meaning from how far it strays from that home and…
Transposition is moving a piece of music from one key to another while keeping every interval between notes exactly the same — the shape stays identical, only the starting pitch ch…
A triad is three notes stacked in thirds: root, third, fifth. It's the smallest unit that can sound like a complete chord rather than just an interval, and every richer harmony in…
Chord alterations are chromatically raised or lowered 9ths and 5ths — ♭9, ♯9, ♭5/♯11, ♯5/♭13 — layered onto a Dominant Seventh Chord to make its pull toward resolution even stronge…
A compound interval is just a simple interval that's been stretched past the octave — a 2nd pushed up twelve half steps becomes a 9th, a 4th becomes an 11th, a 6th becomes a 13th.…
A classical score tries to capture everything a composer wants you to do. A jazz chart tries to capture the opposite — just enough for a room full of strangers to build something t…
Locrian is the seventh of the Modes of the Major Scale, and it's the odd one out: it's the only mode whose tonic triad is diminished rather than major or minor. That diminished tri…
Take a minor triad and put a bright, unresolved major seventh on top instead of the expected minor seventh, and you get one of the strangest, most beautiful sounds in jazz harmony:…
Phrygian is the darkest of the common minor modes — the sound of a minor scale with its floor knocked out. Flatten the second degree and suddenly a plain minor sound picks up a Spa…
A slash chord writes two pieces of information at once: the chord above the slash and the bass note below it, as in C/E or Bb/C. It exists because Chord Symbols alone can't tell a…
Tertian harmony is the system of building chords by stacking thirds on top of a root — third on third on third, straight up. It is the default harmonic language of jazz and Western…
Stack two major thirds on top of each other and you get a chord that refuses to sit still: the augmented triad. Unlike a plain major or minor triad, it has no perfect fifth to act…
Play a single low C on a piano and, whether you hear it or not, you're hearing a whole chord. Every real-world pitch is actually a stack of frequencies — the fundamental plus a lad…
A tetrachord is a four-note segment that spans a perfect fourth — five semitones — and it's one of the oldest tricks in music for building and learning scales. Split any diatonic s…
Every note a jazz piano plays is slightly out of tune — and that compromise is exactly what makes jazz harmony work. Equal temperament divides the octave into 12 identical semitone…
harmony
45How chords function and connect — the engine of jazz.
Blues harmony breaks the central rule of classical functional harmony: instead of treating the dominant seventh as an unstable chord that must resolve, it treats every chord in the…
A cadence is the harmonic punctuation mark of a phrase — the chord move that tells your ear "this is a comma" or "this is a period." Every style of tonal music leans on cadences to…
Functional harmony is the idea that every chord in a key plays one of three roles — home, setup, or tension — and that music makes sense because it moves predictably between them.…
Harmonic rhythm is simply how fast the chords change — measured in bars or beats, not in beats per minute. Two tunes can share a tempo and feel completely different because one hol…
The minor blues takes the familiar 12-bar shape of The 12-Bar Blues and recasts it in a minor key, trading the major blues's bright, dominant-drenched optimism for something darker…
Minor keys have a problem that major keys don't: the plain, unaltered scale gives you a weak dominant. Jazz solves this by refusing to pick just one minor scale and instead treatin…
Modal interchange is the trick of reaching into the parallel minor — same root, different mode — and pulling out a chord that doesn't belong to your major key, then dropping it int…
Modulation is what happens when the ear actually accepts a new home base — not a chromatic detour that snaps back, but a real relocation of the tonic. Standards modulate because a…
Move from a I chord to a ii chord and you're crossing a whole step — C to D — with nothing to guide the ear through the gap. A passing diminished chord fills that gap with a chroma…
Root motion is simply the path traced by chord roots as one chord moves to the next — the skeleton underneath every progression. Strip away the extensions, the voicings, the melody…
A secondary dominant is a Dominant Seventh Chord built on the fifth degree of a chord other than the tonic, borrowed for a bar or two to give that chord its own miniature "V7→I" pu…
The altered dominant is a Dominant Seventh Chord pushed to its maximum tension before it resolves — every note that isn't the root, 3rd, or 7th gets chromatically bent away from "h…
Take a major seventh chord and stretch the fifth up a half step, and you get the one seventh-chord quality the major scale can't produce — harmonize any major scale in sevenths and…
The ii-V-I is the molecule jazz harmony is built from. Every chord walks its root down a perfect fifth into the next — the strongest bass motion in tonal music — while a pair of in…
The minor ii-V-i is what happens when you take jazz's most common cadence — The ii-V-I Progression — and run it through the darker gravity of a minor key. Every chord gets heavier:…
The minor iv chord is a moment of borrowed sadness inside a major-key song. It shows up right where you expect the bright, stable IV chord, but instead the third drops a half step…
Tonicization is the trick of making a chord that isn't "home" feel like home for a beat or two, then quietly walking back. You do it by attaching a dominant chord — a secondary dom…
Tritone substitution swaps a Dominant Seventh Chord for another dominant seventh a tritone away, and the two chords sound almost interchangeable because they share the exact same G…
A turnaround is a short chord progression, usually just two bars, that sits at the end of a section and turns the harmony back around to the top of the form. Instead of letting the…
Analyzing a standard means figuring out what the chords are doing, not just what they are. Instead of memorizing forty chord symbols as a random sequence, you learn to hear a handf…
Available tensions are the notes above the basic 7th chord — the 9th, 11th, 13th, and their alterations — that a player can stack on top without smearing the chord's identity. They…
Bird Blues is what happens when you take The 12-Bar Blues and run it through Charlie Parker's harmonic imagination: every plain chord gets a little runway of ii–V motion leading in…
Chord substitution is the art of swapping one chord for another that does the same job — resolving the same tension, sharing the same Guide Tones — while changing the color or the…
A chromatic approach chord is a whole chord — not just a note — parked a half step above or below where you're actually going, then slid into place at the last instant. It's the ha…
A deceptive resolution is what happens when a V7 chord builds all that gravitational pull toward "home" — and then the music lands somewhere else. The ear expects tonic; it gets a…
A descending bass line progression organizes a passage around one simple thread: the bass walks down, step by step or half-step by half-step, while the chords above are chosen or i…
The Diminished Seventh Chord is jazz harmony's great shapeshifter: because it's built entirely from stacked minor thirds, it's perfectly symmetrical, and a symmetrical object has n…
Stack enough dominant sevenths back-to-back and you get a machine for building tension: each chord is the V7 of the one after it, so the harmony keeps promising resolution and keep…
A harmonic sequence takes a short chord pattern and repeats it starting from a different root, over and over, so the ear locks onto the shape and rides it somewhere new. It is the…
A line cliché is what happens when a chord refuses to move on but still wants to breathe. Instead of progressing to a new root, one voice — usually the top note or the bass — creep…
Modal harmony is what happens when you stop asking chords to resolve. Instead of a progression pulling toward a tonic through tension and release, a modal tune plants a flag on one…
Every dominant seventh chord has the same notes, but not every dominant seventh has the same job. Sometimes that ♭7 is a coiled spring, a tritone straining to resolve down a fifth.…
Planing is what happens when you stop asking "where does this chord want to go" and start asking "what does this shape sound like slid up or down." You take a voicing, keep its exa…
A passing chord is a brief, structurally weightless harmony inserted between two "real" chords to smooth the trip from one to the other. It usually lasts half a beat to half a bar,…
A pedal point is a single note — almost always in the bass — held or repeated while the chords above it keep changing. It solves a real compositional problem: how do you get harmon…
Quartal harmony builds chords out of stacked perfect fourths instead of the stacked thirds of tertian harmony. Strip out the third and you strip out the thing that tells your ear w…
Reharmonization is what happens when you take a melody you know cold and put new chords underneath it — chords the original composer never wrote. It exists because a melody note is…
Take an ordinary Dominant Seventh Chord and sharpen its fifth by a half step, and you get a chord that pulls toward resolution harder than a plain V7 ever could. That raised 5th is…
Most tonic resolutions in jazz arrive through the "front door" — a V7 chord a fifth above the key center, pulling in via the ii-V-I progression. The backdoor ii-V sneaks in from th…
A bare secondary dominant is a chord on loan from another key, aimed at a target that isn't the tonic — but landing on it cold can feel like skipping a step. The related ii chord i…
Take a Dominant Seventh Chord, pull out the note that gives it its bite, and you get one of the most useful sounds in modern jazz. The V7sus4 chord replaces the major 3rd with a pe…
A chromatic mediant is a chord a third away from where you'd expect, that still somehow sounds like it belongs. Move the root by a major or minor third, keep the chord quality the…
Coltrane changes take the familiar ii–V–I and blow it apart into a cycle of key centers a major third apart, so instead of resolving to one tonal center you're falling through thre…
Constant structure is what happens when you take one chord quality — say, major seventh — and just move it around by root, ignoring key. No ii, no V, no resolving anywhere; the cho…
Negative harmony takes a chord or a progression and flips it upside down around a fixed pivot point, turning major into minor and dominant tension into half-diminished shadow while…
rhythm
41Time, feel, swing, and syncopation.
The backbeat is the accent on beats 2 and 4 of a 4/4 measure — the "off" beats, as opposed to the "strong" 1 and 3 that European classical meter leans on. Put the weight there inst…
Swing feel is the trick of playing two equal-looking eighth notes as an unequal long-short pair, and it's the single rhythmic habit that makes jazz sound like jazz rather than a me…
Syncopation is what happens when you accent the beat you aren't supposed to accent. It only works because your ear has already locked onto a steady pulse — beat 1, beat 2, beat 3,…
Meter is the recurring pattern of strong and weak beats that a band silently agrees on before a single note sounds — it's the grid everything else gets hung on. A time signature is…
Bossa nova is Samba taken indoors: the same Afro-Brazilian rhythmic DNA, but slowed down, quieted down, and dressed in modern jazz harmony. Where samba is built for street parades…
Brushes are a drum-set implement — a handle with a fan of thin wire bristles — swapped in for sticks whenever a drummer needs to keep swinging time without covering the band. Inste…
Comping — short for "accompanying" or "complementing" — is what a pianist, guitarist, vibraphonist, or organist does behind a soloist: laying down harmony and rhythm without ever b…
A soloist doesn't hear your voicings so much as when you play them. The dotted-quarter-and-eighth of The Charleston Rhythm, a chord anticipated on the "and" of 4, four dry quarter…
A ghost note is a note that happens exactly on time but almost disappears in volume — a stroke, pluck, or breath that fills a rhythmic slot without competing for your attention. It…
A jazz waltz takes the oldest dance meter in the book — three beats a bar — and swings it, so the lilt of a waltz meets the loose, triplet-based push-and-pull of Swing Feel. It sou…
Rhythmic anticipation is playing a chord or note early — usually on the "and" of beat 4, one eighth note before the downbeat it belongs to. It is the single most common form of Syn…
Rubato is time you steal and then pay back. A soloist stretches a phrase — lingering on a high note, rushing the next line, letting a cadence breathe — with no metronome in the roo…
Shuffle is what you get when you take the long-short triplet lilt of Swing Feel and nail it down: lock the ratio at a hard 2:1, hit it with both hands (or a hand and a foot) in uni…
Two notes, one big idea: hit beat 1, then hit again just before beat 3 arrives, and you've created forward motion out of almost nothing. That's the Charleston rhythm — the single m…
Clave is a two-bar rhythmic pattern that works like a key signature for rhythm: it doesn't dictate every note anyone plays, but it defines what counts as "in" or "out." In Afro-Cub…
The rhythm section is bass, drums, and piano or guitar working as one organism to give a soloist two things: a place to stand (harmony) and a place to move (time). It exists becaus…
The ride cymbal pattern is the rhythmic engine of modern jazz drumming: a repeating quarter-note-and-triplet-skip figure played on the ride cymbal that carries the swing feel all b…
A jazz rhythm section doesn't just keep time — it manages energy over the course of a tune, and two-feel versus four-feel is its main lever. In two-feel, the bassist marks only bea…
A walking bass line is one quarter note per beat, every beat, outlining the chord underneath it. That sounds almost too simple to be a technique, but it is doing two jobs at once:…
The Afro-Cuban 6/8 feel is a groove built entirely out of threes — twelve eighth notes felt as four groups of three, with a bell pattern threaded through them that never lines up n…
Baião is the rustic, straight-eighth dance groove of Brazil's Northeastern sertão — accordion, bass drum, and triangle stomping out a duple pulse built for dancing, not for bossa's…
Beat placement is where, exactly, a note lands relative to the pulse everyone else agrees on — a few dozen milliseconds ahead, a few dozen behind, or dead center. It is not about t…
Cascara — Spanish for "shell" — is the pattern a timbale player sticks out on the metal shell of the drum, not the head, during the verses and quieter stretches of a salsa or mambo…
Double-time and half-time feels are how a rhythm section changes how fast the music feels without changing the tempo at all. The clock never moves — a chorus that took sixty-four s…
A kick is the drummer landing an accent in exact lockstep with a written ensemble figure — the horns punching a chord, the whole band hitting a stop, a section pushing into a new p…
A featured drum solo is a full chorus (or more) where the drummer improvises alone, with the rest of the band laying out, before the form hands control back to the horns. It exists…
Interactive comping is what happens when accompaniment stops being a wallpaper of chords and starts being a conversation. Instead of a pianist repeating the same voicing every two…
A montuno is a short, fiercely repeated arpeggio pattern — usually two bars long — that the piano plays over and over in Afro-Cuban music. It exists to do one job: lock the harmony…
Odd meters are time signatures whose beat count doesn't split evenly into the familiar two- or three-beat units of 4/4 or 3/4 — think 5, 7, 9, or 11 beats per bar. Jazz spent its f…
Polyrhythm is two rhythmic layers dividing the same span of time into different, competing pulses that share one downbeat. It is what lets a drummer, a bassist, and a soloist each…
Rhythmic displacement is the trick of playing the exact same notes but starting them on a different beat than you'd expect. The pitches don't change, the harmony doesn't change, th…
Samba is the driving, percussive heartbeat of Brazilian music — a 2/4 groove built from layered polyrhythmic drum parts that jazz musicians absorbed as their own dialect of Latin f…
Second line is the drum groove of the New Orleans street parade — the beat that makes a crowd of onlookers fall in behind a brass band and start dancing. It exists because a parade…
Songo is the rhythm that put a drummer, not a rack of hand percussion, at the center of Cuban dance music. Created around 1970 by José Luis "Changuito" Quintana with the band Los V…
Stop-time is what happens when the rhythm section quits keeping steady time and instead slams down sharp, unison hits — usually just on beat 1 of the bar — leaving the rest of the…
A horn player can sneak a breath through a rest, a valve change, a tongued note — the audience rarely notices. A singer can't hide it: every phrase ends where the lungs run out, an…
Arco — Italian for "with the bow" — means drawing a horsehair bow across the double bass strings instead of plucking them. It trades the percussive snap of walking bass for a susta…
Broken time is what happens when a rhythm section stops stating the pulse and starts implying it. The drummer quits marking every beat, the bassist quits walking quarter notes, and…
Compás is the fixed 12-beat cycle that every flamenco palo (form — soleá, bulería, alegrías, siguiriyas) is built on, and it does for flamenco what clave does for Afro-Cuban music:…
Maracatu is a processional drumming tradition from Pernambuco, in Brazil's northeast, built around a wall of 8 to 25 bass drums marching together for hours at a stretch. It grew ou…
Metric modulation is a way of changing tempo that doesn't feel like a change at all — you take a subdivision that was already sitting inside the old beat, promote it to be the new…
melody & improvisation
40Building lines and soloing over the changes.
An approach note is a non-chord tone that resolves by step into a chord tone landing on a strong beat. That tiny motion — tension on the weak part of the beat, release on the stron…
A blue note is a pitch that refuses to sit still — sung or played with a bend or slur that lands somewhere between the "wrong" note and the "right" one. It's the sound of a singer…
Call and response is music built as conversation: a phrase is posed (the "call"), and another phrase answers it. It comes down to jazz through African oral tradition — griots, anti…
Chord tone soloing means building an improvised line out of each chord's 1-3-5-7 — root, third, fifth, seventh — so the melody itself spells the harmony. Strip away the piano and b…
An enclosure surrounds a target note from both above and below before landing on it, so the ear gets a small dose of tension right before the release. Instead of walking straight i…
A guide tone line is a slow, deliberately thin melody built from just the guide tones — the 3rd and 7th of each chord in a progression — moved from one chord to the next by the sma…
Guide tones are the 3rd and 7th of a seventh chord — the two notes that actually tell your ear what kind of chord it is. Everything else (root, 5th) is scaffolding; the 3rd and 7th…
Jazz improvisation is learned the way speech is learned: not by memorizing grammar rules first, but by listening, imitating, and absorbing phrases until they become second nature.…
Motivic development is the art of building an improvised solo out of one small idea instead of a pile of borrowed licks. Take a two- or three-note cell and repeat it, twist it, str…
Play only Chord Tones and a melody sounds like a broken-up arpeggio — accurate, but stiff, like reading a sentence with no connecting words. Passing tones and neighbor tones are th…
An improvised solo is speech, not a stream of notes. If you never stop to breathe, a listener can't tell where one thought ends and the next begins — the solo becomes noise no matt…
Playing the changes means improvising a single-note line that makes the chord progression audible on its own — no piano, no bass, nothing but the melody. Strip away the accompanime…
A riff is a short, repeated melodic phrase — usually one or two bars — that stays fixed while the harmony moves underneath it. It exists because bands need something memorable and…
Scat singing is wordless vocal improvisation on nonsense syllables — "doo," "bap," "shoo-bee," "dwee-ya" — where the voice drops its job as a carrier of words and becomes, for a ch…
A target note is a chord tone you decide, in advance, to land on — usually on a strong beat, right as the harmony changes. Everything before it (a scale run, a chromatic slide, a l…
A break is the moment the whole band goes silent and leaves one player standing alone in the middle of the time. For two or four bars, no piano, no bass, no drums — just a soloist,…
Trading fours is a live conversation built into the architecture of a tune: soloists and drummer hand the spotlight back and forth every four bars while the chorus keeps turning un…
Transcription is how jazz musicians have always learned the music: you listen to a recorded solo, figure it out by ear, and absorb it into your own playing. Before there were metho…
Voice leading is the practice of moving each note of a chord the smallest useful distance to the nearest note of the next chord, so a progression stops sounding like a series of un…
When the bass stops walking, the floor drops out from under the band. Every other instrument has been leaning on that steady quarter-note pulse and root motion, and for the length…
Bebop happens fast — chords can change every beat or two — and a scale run alone can't make that motion audible. Bebop melodic language is the set of habits that solves this: conti…
A jazz solo is real-time composition: you're writing a piece of music while you play it, and like any piece of music it needs a shape, not just a string of correct notes. The probl…
Chromaticism is what happens when a jazz line steps outside the notes the chord "asks for" and then finds its way back. Every chromatic note is a small dose of tension that wants t…
Composing a jazz melody uses the exact same raw materials as improvising one — motifs, guide tones, rhythm, contour — but with one enormous advantage: an eraser. You can write eigh…
A digital pattern is a short melodic cell spelled out in scale-degree numbers — 1, 2, 3, 5, or 1, ♭3, 4, 5 — rather than in fixed letter names. Because the numbers are counted fres…
A double-time line is what happens when a soloist suddenly plays twice as many notes per bar while everyone else in the band keeps doing exactly what they were doing. The tempo doe…
Every language has a handful of phrases you say a hundred times a day — "how are you," "excuse me," "let's go." Jazz has one harmonic phrase that shows up just as often: The ii-V-I…
Melodic paraphrase is the improvisational approach where you keep the tune's melody in view and simply dress it up — bending a note, delaying a beat, slipping in a passing tone — r…
A melodic sequence is a short figure repeated immediately at a new pitch level — state an idea, then say it again a step lower or higher. That simple move is one of the cheapest, m…
Modal improvisation is what happens when you take away the chord changes and leave a soloist alone with a single scale for sixteen, thirty-two, even sixty-four bars. It sounds like…
Octave soloing means playing a single-note improvised line twice at once, an octave apart, so the melody suddenly sounds thicker and louder without a single new pitch entering the…
A great jazz solo doesn't sound like a stack of measures stapled together — it sounds like one long, continuous idea. Over-the-barline phrasing is how that illusion gets made: the…
A quotation is a recognizable melody from somewhere else—a nursery rhyme, a classical theme, another standard—dropped whole into the middle of an improvised solo. Players quote to…
Vocalese takes a recorded instrumental solo — every note, every rhythmic quirk, every blue smear — and puts words to it, syllable for syllable, so a singer can perform someone else…
Free improvisation is what happens when you take away the chart. No chord changes, no fixed form, no set meter — just musicians making coherent, moving music in real time using not…
Harmonic superimposition means playing a complete, self-consistent harmonic idea — a triad, a ii–V, a whole reharmonized cycle — on top of chords that aren't actually there. The rh…
Intervallic improvisation builds melodic lines out of consistent wide leaps — 4ths, 5ths, 6ths, 7ths — instead of the stepwise scale motion that drives Bebop Melodic Language. Wher…
Playing outside means deliberately stepping away from the notes a chord "wants" — playing a phrase that doesn't belong to the stated harmony — and then bringing it back. It's not a…
Sheets of sound is critic Ira Gitler's name for a problem John Coltrane set for himself in the late 1950s: what if, instead of picking one good option per chord, you tried to play…
Side-slipping is the simplest trick in the Playing Outside toolbox: take a lick, a chord voicing, or an arpeggio, pick it up whole, and set it down again a half step away — then br…
form & repertoire
48Song forms and the standards every player knows.
The 12-bar blues is three 4-bar phrases built around a single musical idea: state it, restate it with a slight push, then answer it. That AAB shape comes straight out of African-Am…
AABA is the workhorse structure of the Great American Songbook: eight bars of melody, repeated, then eight bars of something else, then a return home. It packs a complete musical a…
ABAC is the other major 32-bar shape in the Great American Songbook — the one that isn't AABA Form. Instead of stating one idea three times around a single bridge, ABAC gives you t…
Repertoire is a jazz musician's working capital. It's the stock of tunes you can call, start, and play through from memory — melody, form, and changes — without a chart, on a bands…
A fake book is a collection of lead sheets — melody, chord symbols, and sometimes lyrics — that lets a musician "fake" a tune they've never played by reading a skeleton chart inste…
The Great American Songbook is the body of popular songs written for Broadway shows, Tin Pan Alley sheet music, and Hollywood films from the 1920s through the 1950s — Gershwin, Por…
A jazz standard is not a fixed piece of music the way a Chopin étude is. It's a vehicle: a shared melody and chord progression that a group of musicians — often strangers — can cli…
Learning a tune by ear means pulling it out of a recording — melody, form, and harmony — until it lives in your memory and your hands rather than on a page. It's slow at first, and…
Rhythm Changes is the 32-bar chord progression lifted from George Gershwin's "I Got Rhythm" (1930), stripped of its melody and its vocal tag, and reused as a harmonic chassis for h…
Every jazz performance needs a repeating container — a fixed number of bars with a fixed harmonic path — that everyone in the band can hold in their head at once. That container is…
Play sixteen bars of the same tune and your ear starts to beg for something new. The bridge is jazz's answer: eight bars of contrast dropped into the middle of a chorus so the retu…
A chorus in jazz is one complete lap through a tune's form — every chord from bar one to the final bar of the progression, played once. It is the basic unit of time musicians think…
Dizzy Gillespie wrote "A Night in Tunisia" in 1942 under the working title "Interlude," and both names tell you what the tune is really about: a vamp-driven, rhythmically exotic fr…
"All of Me" is the tune you hand a student the week after "Autumn Leaves" — where that tune teaches the major and minor ii–V–I, this one teaches secondary dominants in their purest…
Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote "All the Things You Are" for the 1939 musical Very Warm for May, and it has outlived that short-lived show to become one of the Great Ame…
"Alone Together" is the tune that teaches you what happens when a minor-key ballad refuses the easy way out. Most minor-key standards eventually slide over to their relative major…
"Autumn Leaves" is the tune nearly every jazz student learns first, and for good reason: in one 32-bar melody it teaches both the major and minor ii–V–I, connected by nothing more…
"Blue Bossa" is a 16-bar Kenny Dorham tune that every jazz student learns in the first year, and for good reason: it packs a textbook minor ii–V–i and a textbook major ii–V–I into…
"Blue Monk" is Thelonious Monk's 1954 blues head, and it teaches a lesson bebop players usually skip: you don't need reharmonization to make a 12-bar blues sound like something. Mo…
"Body and Soul" (Johnny Green, 1930) is the tune jazz musicians reach for when they want to prove they can really play changes. It packs more harmonic motion into 32 bars than almo…
Cherokee started life in 1938 as a British bandleader's mood-piece for an "Indian Suite," but jazz musicians heard something else in it: a 64-bar obstacle course perfect for separa…
"Confirmation" is Charlie Parker's 1945 masterpiece of compositional craft: a 32-bar AABA Form tune in F major whose A section marches down a chain of ii–V units, one per bar, like…
A contrafact is a new melody written over the chord progression of an existing tune — same harmonic skeleton, brand-new tune on top. Bebop musicians turned this into standard pract…
"Donna Lee" is the tune every bebop student eventually has to face: a torrent of continuous eighth notes that never lets up for thirty-two bars, built not on an original chord prog…
Wayne Shorter's "Footprints" takes the oldest, plainest form in jazz — the Minor Blues — and pours it into a meter that never quite settles. It matters because it proves you don't…
"Giant Steps" is the tune that made an entire generation of saxophonists sweat. John Coltrane took the familiar ii-V-I cadence, kept its shape, but pointed it at three key centers…
Rodgers and Hart wrote "Have You Met Miss Jones" in 1937 for the Broadway show I'd Rather Be Right, and it has lived on as one of the Great American Songbook's favorite fast-tempo…
"How High the Moon" is jazz's most important donor tune — a chord progression so useful for practicing that bebop players wrote a faster, sharper melody over it and mostly forgot t…
"I Got Rhythm" is a 1930 George and Ira Gershwin show tune that quietly became the second-most important chord progression in jazz, after the blues. Strip away Ira's lyric and Ethe…
Billy Strayhorn wrote "Lush Life" as a teenager in Pittsburgh, and it sounds like nothing else in the standard repertoire because he never designed it to be one — it's a miniature…
"Maiden Voyage" is the piece that proves a jazz tune doesn't need a single dominant resolution to feel like it's going somewhere. Herbie Hancock built the whole thing out of suspen…
"My Funny Valentine" is the tune every jazz student eventually points to when explaining what a line cliché actually sounds like. Rodgers and Hart wrote it in 1937 for Babes in Arm…
John Coltrane's "Naima" is a ballad built almost entirely from two bass notes. Instead of stringing together ii–V–I's, the harmony holds one pitch under each section and lets a cha…
"On Green Dolphin Street" is the standard jazz players reach for to practice changing gears mid-tune. Its A sections float over a static bass note with slow, non-functional chords…
"Round Midnight" is Thelonious Monk's 1943 ballad in E♭ minor, and it is the single most-recorded jazz composition ever written by a jazz musician. Its fame is not an accident of t…
"Satin Doll" is a 1953 Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn tune that sounds like easy-listening swing but is secretly a bebop harmony lesson in disguise. Its A section doesn't resol…
"So What" is the tune that put Modal Jazz on the map. Opening Kind of Blue (1959), Miles Davis's composition strips harmony down to two scales and a single question-and-answer gest…
"Solar" looks like a blues — twelve bars, medium swing, minor-key mood — but it isn't one. It's a compressed harmonic machine: a chain of ii-V-I cells dropping from C minor through…
"Someday My Prince Will Come" started life as a Disney lullaby — Frank Churchill's 1937 song for Snow White — and became, twenty years later, the tune every jazz musician reaches f…
"St. Thomas" is the tune every jazz student meets twice: once as a great melody to learn, and once as the textbook case for how a whole solo can grow out of one small idea instead…
"Stella by Starlight" is the tune jazz musicians hand you when they want to see if you actually understand harmony, not just memorize shapes. Almost every bar is a ii–V or a lone d…
"Sweet Georgia Brown" is the textbook tune for extended dominants and backcycling: instead of announcing its home key, it opens on a dominant chord a sixth above the tonic and ride…
A tag ending is what happens when a band, with no chart and no rehearsal, needs everyone to stop at the same moment — so instead of just stopping, they repeat the last phrase of th…
Billy Strayhorn's "Take the A Train" is the tune where swing-era clarity meets a single, perfectly placed harmonic surprise. Everything about it is legible enough for a big band to…
Before there was a "head," there was a scene. The verse is the free, prose-like preamble that Great American Songbook composers wrote to ease an audience out of spoken dialogue and…
"Tune Up" is 16 bars of nothing but ii–V–I, repeated in three keys a whole step apart. That simplicity is exactly the point: where a tune like Giant Steps hides its ii–V–I cells in…
Take the chord changes away and what's left to create drama? Repetition. A vamp or an ostinato suspends harmonic motion so that time, texture, and groove do the work that ii–V–I pr…
Thelonious Monk wrote "Well You Needn't" in 1944, and it is the cleanest lesson the standard repertoire has in thinking about chords as colors rather than functions. The whole AABA…
styles & history
33Eras, movements, and the players who shaped the music.
The blues is jazz's mother tongue — a musical language born in the late-19th-century Deep South out of work songs, field hollers, and spirituals sung by formerly enslaved and rural…
Bebop is what happens when dance music decides it doesn't want to be danced to anymore. In the early 1940s, young musicians tired of playing arranged riffs for big bands started me…
Early Jazz is what happens when a brass band, a blues singer, and a ragtime piano roll all move into the same house. Rather than one soloist backed by accompanists, a small New Orl…
A jam session is jazz with no conductor and no sheet music — a room full of strangers who can nonetheless produce a coherent, listenable performance because they share a code. That…
Stride piano is what happens when one pianist decides to be the whole rhythm section — bassist, drummer, and comping guitarist rolled into a single left hand — while the right hand…
The Swing Era (roughly 1935–1946) is the moment jazz became America's popular dance music, and it did so by solving a mechanical problem: how do you make 15 musicians groove as har…
A Love Supreme is the record where John Coltrane stopped running changes and started building a whole suite out of one four-note idea. Recorded in a single session by his "classic…
Afrobeat is what you get when Lagos highlife, Yoruba ceremonial drumming, American funk, and jazz's improvising ethos all move into the same house. Fela Kuti and drummer Tony Allen…
Choro is Brazil's first great instrumental music — born in Rio de Janeiro in the 1870s when local musicians took European salon dances like the polka and waltz and ran them through…
Cool jazz is what happens when you take bebop's harmonic vocabulary and turn down the temperature: a light, nearly vibrato-less tone, softer attacks, time laid back behind the beat…
The "ECM sound" is a production and harmonic aesthetic, not a nationality: spacious, reverb-rich recordings built around slow-moving modal harmony, rubato time, and long stretches…
Flamenco jazz asks what happens when a music built to circle endlessly around a single Phrygian center meets a music built to move — through ii–V–I chains toward resolution. Flamen…
Gypsy jazz is what happens when you take away the drummer and the piano and ask the guitars to do everything instead. Built by the Romani guitarist Django Reinhardt in 1930s Paris,…
Hard bop is what happened when jazz musicians in the mid-1950s decided Bebop had gotten too cerebral for its own good. It pulls the music back down into The Blues, gospel church mu…
Latin jazz takes jazz harmony — extended chords, Bebop-derived improvisation, horn-section arranging — and sets it on top of Afro-Latin rhythmic frameworks instead of the swung, ri…
Modal jazz was a rebellion against too many chords. By the late 1950s, Bebop soloists were navigating tunes whose chords could change every two beats—thrilling, but exhausting to s…
Neo-bop was jazz's 1980s about-face: a generation of young, mostly conservatory-trained musicians, led by trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, who put down the electric bass and the synthesi…
Soul jazz is what happens when Hard Bop leans all the way into the church and the corner bar. Instead of piling up chord substitutions and racing tempos, soul jazz strips the harmo…
South African jazz is what happens when American Bebop and swing land in Johannesburg township shebeens and Cape Town carnival streets and get married to a completely different har…
Spiritual jazz asks a different question than most jazz: not "where does this progression go next" but "how long can we hold this feeling." It grew out of the late work of John Col…
The Shape of Jazz to Come is Ornette Coleman's 1959 answer to a problem every bebop soloist eventually runs into: what if the chord changes are the thing limiting your melody, not…
The AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians), founded in Chicago in 1965, treated composition itself as the avant-garde act — not just what notes you play outsi…
Contemporary jazz harmony is what happens when several generations of harmonic innovation stop being exceptions and become the default vocabulary. Chords in this world aren't prima…
Free jazz is what happens when a generation of players decide the chord chart is the problem, not the solution. Starting around 1959, Ornette Coleman, Cecil Taylor, Albert Ayler, a…
Indo-Jazz fusion is what happens when jazz improvisers meet Indian classical music on its own terms — not by sprinkling a sitar over a swing tune, but by trading the chord changes…
Jazz fusion is what happens when Post-Bop harmony meets a rock or funk rhythm section — electric piano and guitar, synthesizer bass, drums playing straight eighths instead of a swi…
M-Base is Steve Coleman's answer to a problem bebop and free jazz both left unsolved: how do you keep the deep, physical groove of funk while still improvising with total structura…
Every jazz record sits on top of two separate copyrights, and the money follows ownership of each one. Bebop musicians understood this cold: when Charlie Parker wrote a new melody…
Post-bop is what happens when a rhythm section keeps bebop's nervous energy and swing feel but throws out the ii–V–I road map. Chords stop resolving and start coloring; melodies fl…
Before there was mambo, before there was Latin Jazz, there was a Cuban ballroom dance so formal it had its own etiquette: the danzón. Its later, looser cousin, the cha-cha-chá, sim…
Third Stream is what happens when composers refuse to choose between jazz and classical music and instead try to build a genuine third thing out of both. It is not a saxophone solo…
Timba is what happens when conservatory-trained Cuban musicians take songo's funk-and-clave fusion and push it as far as it will go — denser rhythm sections, more aggressive bass,…
"Time, no changes" is a way of playing where the rhythm section keeps the swing — steady pulse, walking bass, ride cymbal — but the chord progression underneath the solos disappear…
voicings & arranging
27A chord symbol like Cmaj7 tells you almost nothing about how it should sound. A voicing is the concrete decision that fills in the rest: which notes you actually play, in what orde…
Stack a seventh chord in close position — all four notes crammed within an octave — and in the middle of the piano or on guitar it turns to mud: the notes are too close together to…
Rootless voicings are four-note (sometimes three-note) Chord Voicings that leave out the root entirely, trusting the bassist to supply it. Once you accept that the bass will always…
A shell voicing strips a chord down to the two notes that actually tell you what it is: the 3rd and the 7th. Everything else — the root, the 5th, any extensions — is optional color…
A background is what a section of horns plays while somebody else is soloing or singing — a riff, a pad, a punch on beat two — and its whole job is to make the soloist sound better…
Big band arranging is the craft of writing for a fifteen-to-seventeen-piece jazz orchestra so that a room full of individual horn players sounds like one instrument with one intent…
Block chords take a single melody line and dress every note in its own full chord, all moving together in strict rhythm. The effect is that one pianist's two hands suddenly sound l…
Chord melody is the art of playing a tune's melody, its harmony, and often its bass line all at once, on one instrument, almost always solo guitar. It exists to solve a specific pr…
A countermelody is a second, independent line played against a lead melody — not a harmony stacked underneath it, but a genuine other voice with its own shape, its own logic, its o…
Take a tightly stacked four-note chord, reach into the middle of it, and yank one note down an octave into the bass. That's a drop 3 voicing — and the "drop" leaves you with a wide…
Four-way close is what happens when you take a single melody line and give each note its own four-note chord, all packed into one octave, all moving in lockstep with the tune. Play…
Freddie Green style is the art of playing almost nothing and making it swing harder than anyone else in the band. It's four-to-the-bar acoustic rhythm guitar, built on two- and thr…
Every melody note has to live inside a chord — the question is which chord, and what role the note plays once it's there. Harmonizing a melody means picking, note by note, a stack…
A head arrangement is a full band arrangement built entirely by ear and memory — riffs taught section by section, layered and traded until a working chart exists, with nothing ever…
A lead sheet tells you the changes to the head — it says nothing about how a band walks onto the tune or walks off it. Every performance needs a frame: something that sets key, tem…
A mute is a piece of hardware — cork, rubber, sometimes a literal plumber's plunger — that a brass player jams into or holds over the bell. It doesn't make the horn quieter so much…
Quartal voicings are what happens when you throw out thirds and build a chord by stacking fourths instead. Under the hands they feel open and unresolved — no clear major or minor f…
Quintal voicings stack perfect fifths instead of thirds or fourths, and the sound they make is wide, open, and rock-solid — less "chord" than "resonant frame." They're the natural…
A shout chorus is the moment a big band arrangement stops asking politely and starts shouting: the whole ensemble — saxes, brass, and rhythm — locks into loud, syncopated, tightly…
A spread voicing takes a chord and pulls it apart across two or more octaves instead of stacking it inside one. The payoff is clarity: a wide interval in the bass rings clean, whil…
Bill Evans needed a chord that could sit under a modal melody for eight bars without ever wanting to resolve. He found it in a stack of perfect 4ths topped by a major 3rd, and it a…
An upper structure triad is just a plain major or minor triad — the same shape you learned in week one — played on top of a chord's essential 3rd and 7th. That's the whole trick: i…
Vocal group harmony takes the same idea behind four-way close — melody on top, three voices stacked directly beneath it in one octave — and hands it to four human throats instead o…
Give a big-band arranger seventeen musicians and the job is damage control: how do you stack that many horns without turning the chord into mud? Give a combo arranger two or three…
A cluster voicing packs two or more notes a mere step apart — a major or minor second — instead of the thirds or fourths that build ordinary Chord Voicings. Those adjacent seconds…
Cross-sectional voicing is what happens when an arranger stops treating the trumpets, trombones, and saxes as three separate choirs and starts treating the whole band as one instru…
A polychord is two complete triads (or a triad and a seventh chord) stacked and sounded together, read and gripped as two familiar shapes rather than one dense chord symbol. Instea…
chord-scale theory
22An avoid note is a scale tone that sits a half step above a chord tone, and clashes if you park on it. The textbook case is F over Cmaj7: hold F against the E–G–B of the chord and…
Play a seven-note scale in straight eighth notes and something goes wrong: the chord tones keep landing on the and of the beat instead of the downbeat. Add one chromatic note to ma…
Chord-scale theory says every chord implies a scale: stack the chord tones, fill in the gaps with the tensions that sound good against it, and you get a seven-note (or eight-note)…
Take The Major Scale and pull out the two notes that create its sharpest half-step friction — the 4th and the 7th — and you're left with five notes where almost anything sounds goo…
The blues scale is what happens when you try to write down a shout. Blues singers bend pitches — sliding into the third, worrying the fifth, leaning flat on the seventh — and the b…
Every Dominant Seventh Chord is built around the same engine — a tritone between the 3rd and ♭7th pulling toward resolution — but that engine can be dressed in wildly different col…
Take the brightest scale in tonal music — Lydian, with its floating raised 4th — and raise the 5th too, and something strange happens: the scale stops resolving anywhere. It just g…
Play a plain natural 4th against a dominant seventh chord and hold it, and you get an ugly minor 2nd rub against the major 3rd — the textbook avoid note problem. Lydian Dominant fi…
Ask a working jazz musician which single scale rewards the most practice time, and most will say melodic minor. Jazz melodic minor uses the same seven notes ascending and descendin…
A lead sheet might show "Dm7" three times in one tune, and each time you're expected to play a different scale over it. That's not a mistake — it's the whole game of Chord-Scale Th…
Mixolydian ♭6 is what you reach for when a V7 chord is marked ♭13 but nothing else is altered — no ♭9, no ♯9, just a darkened top note over an otherwise clean dominant. It is the f…
Five notes, no half steps, no tritone — pentatonics are the improviser's escape hatch from the friction of Avoid Notes. Strip a scale down to its fourth-heavy, gap-toothed core and…
A minor-key V7 chord doesn't just want a ♭9 — it usually wants a ♭13 too, and it wants to keep its natural 5th while it's at it. The Phrygian Dominant scale is the built-in answer:…
The altered scale exists to answer one question: what do you play over a dominant chord that's been loaded up with every possible alteration at once? Instead of memorizing separate…
The diminished scale is an eight-note scale built entirely from alternating whole and half steps, and that alternation is the whole point: it's the one scale in the chord-scale too…
Build a scale out of nothing but whole steps and something strange happens: every note becomes interchangeable with every other note. There's no tritone-resolving leading tone, no…
The augmented scale is a six-note symmetrical scale that divides the octave into two interlocking augmented triads a half step apart. It exists to solve a specific problem: how do…
Take a major scale and drop the 6th degree a half step, and you get a scale that still sounds bright and major up top but suddenly has a dark, almost tragic pull in the middle. Tha…
Plain Locrian has a problem: its 2nd degree sits a flat 9 above the root, and that half-step rub against the root sounds like a bruise, not a color. Locrian Natural 2 fixes exactly…
George Russell's Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization is the theory that quietly rewired how jazz musicians think about scales and chords. Instead of treating the major s…
Barry Harris built his whole teaching system around one idea: a plain 6th chord and a diminished 7th chord a whole step above it are secretly the same family of notes. Interlock th…
A triad pair is two triads with zero notes in common, played together as a six-note (hexatonic) scale. The idea solves a real improvising problem: pure modal scales can sound like…