Sixth Chords

foundations 1 #jazz-theory#foundations

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” chord — none of the pull of the leading tone that a major seventh carries. If your melody note sits on the root, a maj7 chord clashes a half step below it; a 6th chord never does.

What the 6th replaces and why

A tonic triad by itself (C E G) is stable but plain. Adding a major 7th (B) makes it richer but introduces the leading tone, which wants to resolve up to the root — great for motion, wrong for an ending. Swing arrangers found a third option: add the 6th degree instead. It colors the triad without creating any pull, so it became the default way to voice a lingering tonic, a final chord, or a chord under a held melody note.

  • C6 = C E G A (major triad + major 6th)
  • F6 = F A C D
  • B♭6 = B♭ D F G
  • E♭6 = E♭ G B♭ C

The minor sixth, and its hidden identity

Minor sixth chords work the same way but sit on a minor triad. The rule to memorize: the 6th is always a major 6th, even over a minor triad. A minor triad with a flatted 6th (C–E♭–G–A♭) isn’t a sixth chord at all — those notes are just an inversion of A♭maj7.

  • Cm6 = C E♭ G A
  • Fm6 = F A♭ C D
  • B♭m6 = B♭ D♭ F G
  • E♭m6 = E♭ G♭ B♭ C

Here’s the trick that makes m6 chords so useful: spell Cm6 starting from its 6th instead of its root, and you get A C E♭ G — which is exactly Am7♭5 (A C E♭ G). Same four notes, different root. This is just a chord inversion relationship in disguise, and it’s why Cm6 and Am7♭5 are functionally interchangeable in a comping situation — same four notes, so pick whichever bass note serves the line better.

The 6/9 chord and the Barry Harris system

Stack both the 6th and the 9th on a major triad and you get the 6/9 chord — arguably the single most “finished,” least tense tonic voicing in the whole jazz vocabulary, common as a last chord on a ballad.

  • C6/9 = C E G A D
  • F6/9 = F A C D G
  • B♭6/9 = B♭ D F G C

Here are all three sixth-chord types stacked on C for comparison:

Because sixth chords have no built-in forward motion, pianist Barry Harris built an entire pedagogical system around them: the sixth-diminished scale alternates a sixth chord with a diminished 7th chord a half step apart, turning a static six-chord tonic into an eight-note scale full of internal voice-leading. It’s a way of injecting motion back into a chord that was invented specifically to have none.

Sixth chords as rhythm-section and voicing currency

In big-band and combo rhythm sections, the sixth chord is practically the house style. Freddie Green’s guitar comping with Basie leaned on lean, three-note sixth-chord shapes — root, 3rd, 6th, no 5th — driving quarter notes under the whole band for decades. Pianists doing locked-hands block chords (George Shearing, Milt Buckner) built their voicings almost entirely from maj6 and min6 sonorities rather than 7th chords, because the sixth sits comfortably inside four-way close and voicing textures without needing resolution. You’ll also hear I6 standing in for a plain I chord at the end of a tag ending or in the closing bars of an arrangement, giving the final chord warmth instead of the more “classical” ring of a maj7.

Freddie Green’s shapes are movable three-note grips built from root, 3rd, and 6th, with the 5th left out:

C6
ERA3D6GBe
Root on the 5th string with the 3rd and 6th stacked above — no 5th anywhere
F6
7frERA3D6GBe
The identical grip slid up five frets — same fingering, new key
B♭6
ERADGBe
The same shape at the 1st fret, with the 3rd and 6th falling on open strings

One naming trap worth flagging: in classical theory, “sixth chord” means something completely different — a first-inversion triad (like C/E), nothing to do with adding a 6th degree. Jazz musicians mean the added-note chord discussed here; always check context.

♫ Listen

  • George Shearing Quintet — “Lullaby of Birdland” (MGM, 1952): the opening and closing block chords are built almost entirely from maj6/min6 voicings — listen for that shimmering, parallel “locked-hands” texture.
  • Count Basie and His Orchestra — “One O’Clock Jump” (Decca, 1937): listen for Freddie Green’s steady quarter-note guitar on lean sixth-chord shapes, driving the rhythm section under the riff choruses.

Related: Major Seventh Chord, Minor Seventh Chord, Half-Diminished Chord, Stride Piano, Seventh Chords