Last month we introduced you to jazz pianist Barry Harris's approach
to developing a chord voicing style based on two unique hybrid scales: the major
6 diminished scale and the minor 6 diminished scale. To recap briefly,
the scales consist of two chords each: a major 6 and a diminished 7th, and a minor
6 and a diminished 7th, respectively. I hope you've enjoyed the exercises I've
presented - and that you've practised them in all keys! The skills you develop
by doing so will help you to "read into" the chord symbols you encounter
on a typical fakebook chart.
The goal and beauty of this system is finding ways to move voicings
along the appropriate hybrid scale in such a way that the motion leads into the
next chord. Taking a II-V progression in D as an example, an Am7 flat 5 can be
realized as a Cm6, which together with the Bdim7 chord forms the C minor 6 diminished
scale (for a refresher, refer to Examples 6
and 10
in "Evolutionary Voicings, Part I" in the October '98 issue). Moving
a Cm6 voicing along that scale makes for a very interesting sound, and it leads
nicely to the D7. Once on the D7, you could use a voicing from the Eflat
minor 6 diminished scale, which is the altered scale for D7 (see Examples
10 and 11 in October).
In the following examples, I have voiced the minor 7th, minor
7flat5, and major 7th chords with their corresponding 6th chords (refer to Example
10
in October). Some of the 6th voicings contain notes borrowed from their associated
diminished 7th chords (Example
19 in October). You'll also find places where I've incorporated related dominant
7th voicings over a root dominant 7th (Examples
11 and 12 in October). Have fun applying these techniques to other tunes in
your repertoire. |