soong
11-11-2008, 05:02 PM
Hi guys, just thinking over this question.
Any help?
Any help?
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This is a search-engine-friendly text mirror of the TalkBass Forums soong 11-11-2008, 05:02 PM Hi guys, just thinking over this question. Any help? Bassist4Life 11-11-2008, 05:09 PM I would help you out, but I don't understand you question. "An A minor" would be a chord. A, C, E. The 7th of that chord is G. The key of A minor (aeolian) is: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A. I'm not sure how the "Cycle of 5th's" relates to your question. Joe soong 11-11-2008, 05:12 PM I would help you out, but I don't understand you question. "An A minor" would be a chord. A, C, E. The 7th of that chord is G. The key of A minor (aeolian) is: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A. I'm not sure how the "Cycle of 5th's" relates to your question. Joe Cheers Joe. i actually meant the key of A Minor, what would be the cycle of 5ths progression? in 4 note chords Jim Carr 11-11-2008, 05:17 PM I'm skipping the 7ths, but I think this is what you mean: a diatonic cycle of 5ths in the key of A minor. While you actually might have any chord, here is what I think you are looking for, assuming good voice-leading: Am Dm G C F Bdim E Am Note, that can be started anywhere, and is also the same as C major. For 7ths, go up a third from the 5th to a scale member. I made E a major chord so it would end on A minor. mambo4 11-11-2008, 05:24 PM for 7th chords, you need to specify if you're using the natural/aeolian minor or the harmonic minor... Natural minor would be the same chords as C major: Am7 Dm7 G7 CMAJ7 FMAJ7 Bm7b5 Em Am But often ,esp in jazz, it's the harmonic minor that is used Amin-maj7 Dmin7 G7 Caug7 Fmaj7 Bm7b5 E7 Amin-maj7 EADG mx 11-11-2008, 07:36 PM Do you want 5ths up or 5ths down? Since you're talking about 7th chords I assume you want down? Also in lots of music, it's typical to use the harmonic minor (raised 7) ONLY on the dominant (V) chord, although you could theoretically use it on every diatonic chord. |