12 - The Complete Guide To Chord Melody
12 - The Complete Guide To Chord Melody
12 - The Complete Guide To Chord Melody
Chord melody playing is one of the most popular topics of study with Jazz guitarists, and for
good reason.
Being able to play guitar chords, bass notes, licks, and other items over a melody line can
lift any Jazz standard from the mundane to new levels of excitement in your playing.
Though you may love to listen to the great chord melody and solo guitar players, such as
Joe Pass, Ted Greene, and Ed Bickert, it may seem like learning to play chord melody is
out of your reach.
By studying the arrangements and concepts in this lesson, you’ll not only expand your
chord melody repertoire, but also learn how to build your own chord melodies.
In this lesson, you’ll study chord melody and solo guitar arrangements of the Jazz standard
After You’ve gone, which is in the public domain.
More importantly, extract the concepts and techniques from this lesson and apply them to
other chord melody tunes you’re working on in the practice room.
This way you not only learn these arrangements, but you build the skills needed to create
your own chord melodies.
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Contents (Click to Jump to a Section)
To begin, let’s take a minute to define the term chord melody so that you understand how
it’s used in the context of this lesson.
In conversation, the term chord melody can refer to both group and solo guitar
arrangements.
But, to make things clearer, those two approaches will have their own definition in this
lesson.
Now, let’s take a look at a chord melody in action as you compare four bars of single notes
to four bars of chord melody.
Here’s the first four bars to After You’ve Gone written out as a single note melody.
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Now, here’s that same melody line played in a chord melody arrangement.
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One is played in a single-line approach, and the other is that same line harmonized by
adding chords underneath the melody line.
As you progress through the material in this lesson, you’ll learn how to harmonize melody
lines, as well as explore variations to this technique that will expand both your chord
melody and solo guitar arrangements.
Besides knowing how to define a chord melody, it’s also important to know the difference
between chord melody and solo guitar playing, which you’ll explore in the next section.
Chord Melody vs. Solo Guitar
As you just learned, it’s important to understand how chord melody and solo guitar
arrangements compare before studying them in the practice room.
Both of these approaches share similar outlines and approaches, which is why they’re
sometimes referred to as the same thing in conversion.
But, there are some fundamental differences between chord melody and solo guitar playing
that will make learning these two styles of guitar playing easier in your practicing.
To begin this comparison, here are a number of characteristic elements of chord melody
playing to note.
Used to replace the single-note head, then leads into the solo sections
Now, here are the elements that characterize solo guitar playing and arranging.
As you can see, though both of these approaches involve harmonizing a melody line, they
use different musical approaches, and are played in different musical situations.
Understanding these differences will help you decide on the right approach for your next
chord melody or solo guitar arrangement.
Now that you have an understanding of these two approaches, it’s time look at how to
prepare a tune for a chord melody or solo guitar arrangement.
While putting together a chord melody isn’t as easy as putting together Ikea furniture, if
that’s even easy, there are steps you can take to make this process easier to accomplish.
In this section, you’ll learn 4 steps that you can use to help you organize your chord melody
practice routine.
By following these steps, you’ll provide yourself with the direction and focus you need to
arrange any Jazz standard for chord melody or solo guitar performance.
Now, it will take some time to get this process down in your studies.
So, if you’re new to chord melody, or Jazz guitar, and these steps seem out of your reach
for now, not to worry.
Read about these steps, and make notes of what you don’t understand quite yet.
Then, learn the arrangements below and read about how they’re built.
After that, come back and see if these 4 steps are clearer.
From there, with a bit of elbow grease, you’ll be ready to arrange chord melodies on your
own.
The first preparatory item you’ll need to decide upon is the key you’ll use for your chord
melody or solo guitar arrangement.
Changing the key of a standard is more applicable to a solo guitar version, where you have
the freedom to move around more in your performance.
But, if a melody line is too high or too low in a certain key to build a chord melody, feel free
to change the key for that tune to make it easier.
You’ll see an example of this approach in the Joe Pass solo guitar version below.
After you’ve picked a key, you’re ready to set up the melody line for your arrangement.
The next thing you’ll need to do is take the melody line to the top two strings, only using the
third string when necessary.
Doing so will provide you the space you need to add chords below the melody line in your
arrangement.
To see how this works, check out this phrase from After You’ve Gone in the original lead
sheet octave.
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You’ll note that there’s not much room to play with when adding chords below that melody
line.
Here’s that same phrase up an octave, on the top two strings as a comparison.
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Much better right?
So, before moving on to any of the chord melody arrangements in this lesson, take a
minute and learn to play the melody to After You’ve Gone on the top two strings.
This’ll give you a sense of the melody line before exploring the chord melodies below.
As well, it’ll show you how to be flexible with a melody line in your chord melodies.
When working through the arrangements below, you’ll notice that notes get moved around
to fit different chords and bass notes on the guitar.
So, when working out the melody on the top two strings, don’t think of that as dogma as far
as the fingering.
Be flexible, and don’t be afraid to take a note you played on the second string and move it
to the first string if needed.
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Step 3 – Picking Hand Choices
The next choice you’ll have to make in preparation for a chord melody is which picking
technique you’ll use to play the arrangement.
Here are the three choices for picking when it comes to chord melody and solo guitar
playing.
Pick Only
Fingerpicking Only
Hybrid Picking (Fingers and Pick
If you choose picking only, you’ll nail the single notes, but might have trouble with certain
chords or bass line phrases.
Fingerpicking is great for chords and basslines, but lags behind on single-notes with most
players.
Lastly, hybrid picking tends to be the best of both worlds, but can take some time getting
used to in your playing.
No matter which option you choose, there are pros and cons to work through in the
woodshed.
So, try each of these picking hand variations out and see which one suits your playing style
the best.
From there, you can stick with that picking approach, or use it most of the time with the
others coming into play when the situations calls for it.
Now comes the tough part, adding chords on top of the melody line.
As you’ll see in the arrangements in this lesson, you can choose to harmonize some or all
of the notes in a chord melody.
When doing so, the best way to find the right chord for a melody note is to identify the
interval of the melody note.
From there, you find a chord shape you know that has that interval at the top note, and
that’s the chord you use over that melody note.
For example, if the melody note is A, and the chord is F7, you play an F7 chord with the 3rd
on top, such as a root position Drop 2 chord.
If you need a refresher on voicings and inversions, check out these Jazz guitar chord
lessons.
Each of these lessons has the notes written out as intervals on the fretboard, which will be
very helpful for your chord melody study.
After you’ve put the chords under each melody note, or as many melody notes as you feel
is sufficient for your arrangement, you’re ready to play your chord melody.
With these steps in mind, you could now take a standard and come up with your own
arrangement, or move on to learn the sample arrangements in the lesson below.
Now that you’ve studied chord melody and solo guitar arrangements on paper, it’s time to
take that knowledge to the fretboard.
Here’s a chord melody version of After You’ve Gone that you can learn, both with a
metronome and over the backing track, in your studies.
As you work on this arrangement, make notes of any elements that stand out to you.
It might be a chord voicing you like, or a right-hand technique that grabs your ears, circle
those notes on the page or make a note of them for further study.
Lastly, as is the case with any arrangement in this lesson, chord melody or otherwise, the
music on the page is a starting point, not an ending point.
Because of this, you’ll hear slight variations in the audio examples throughout this lesson.
These could be slides added in, picking-hand variation, and other guitar techniques applied
to the written chord melody.
Take this approach in your own chord melody and solo guitar playing.
Treat the arrangements like lead sheets. Learn the notes on the page, and then add in your
own interpretation of those notes.
This will help you learn chord melody concepts, and bring a personal touch to any
arrangement you study in the woodshed.
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Solo Guitar Arrangement
After learning the chord melody for After You’ve Gone, you can now explore a solo guitar
version of this tune in your studies.
As you learned earlier, you’ll now have more of a focus on lower bass notes in this version.
And you have more freedom to explore phrasing and pauses in this arrangement.
In the audio, you’ll hear one approach to the phrasing of this solo guitar standard.
But, don’t let that be the only approach to the tune that you work on.
Then, come up with your own way of phrasing, slowing down, speeding up, and adding
pauses to the arrangement.
With the freedom that solo guitar allows, it’s these musical choices that makes any chord
melody personalized in your playing.
Click to hear
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Chord Melody With Substitutions
Now that you’ve worked out a combo and solo guitar version of After You’ve gone, you’re
ready to apply a few chord substitutions to this Jazz standard.
When playing chord melodies, you can use many of the same chord subs that you would
use when comping or soloing over that same tune.
In this arrangement, you’ll study three main chord substitutions that you can take out of this
context and add to your own chord melody arrangements.
You’ll notice that none of these subs steps too far outside the given key, but that they add
new interest to the arrangement compared to only using diatonic chords.
Chord subs don’t have to be highly chromatic to be effective, they just need to be musical
and applied to the right moment for that sub to work.
With these chord subs, you’re replacing a diatonic chord with the V7 of the next chord in
the tune.
An example of this would be if you had a Cm7 to F7 progression and you replace Cm7 with
C7.
This creates a V7/V7 to V7 progression, commonly called a secondary dominant, as it’s the
dominant 7th of another chord besides the tonic in that key.
As well, this could also mean seeing C7 for a bar, and moving between C7 and G7 over
that measure.
This creates the same secondary dominant sound, but this time over a static chord rather
than a chord progression.
Adding secondary dominants to your playing is an effective way to spice up a chord melody
arrangement.
It can be overdone, so be careful, but it can also create interest in tunes with repetitive ii V
and ii V I progressions as you alter those in each chorus of chord melody.
Secondary ii V Chords
You won’t see this approach in the chord melody arrangement below, but it will show up in
the Joe Pass version of After You’ve Gone in a lower section.
This an extension of the secondary dominant substitution, only now you insert a ii V instead
of only the V7 chord in your chord melodies.
To do so, when playing Cm7 to F7, you can now play, Gm7 C7 to F7.
This replaces the Cm7 chord with a secondary dominant chord, C7, and it’s related iim7
chord, Gm7.
As well, you can use this approach over a static chord in your playing.
As you added C7-G7-C7 over a static C7 chord, you can also play C7-Dm7 G7-C7, to
create a secondary ii V progression.
Because the iim7 and V7 chords are so closely related, you can use them as a combo, or
one at a time, when using them in a chord substitution situation.
The final chord substitution used in this lesson is playing a dim7 chord over a 7th chord,
which implies a 7b9 sound over that change.
This was a favorite Wes Montgomery chord technique, especially when paired up with
secondary dominants, among other great players.
Whenever you see a 7th chord in a tune, you can play a dim7 chord from the b9 of that
change.
The important part is then resolving that tension so that it sounds musical and not like a
mistake in your chord melody.
Now that you’ve learned about the theory behind these concepts, it’s time to hear and play
them in a musical situation.
As you go through the following chord melody study, notice how the chord subs alter the
sound of the tune as compared to the version you learned earlier.
It’s not a drastic change, but one that brings new interest into the arrangement.
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Solo Guitar With Substitutions
You can now add chord substitutions to a solo guitar version of After You’ve gone.
When doing so, you’ll use the same concepts that you explored in the chord melody
version above.
But, you now have more of a focus on the bass movement, and freedom to play with the
time and phrasing with this approach.
As you’re playing more bass notes in your chords during a solo version vs. a combo
version, the bassline becomes more important when choosing chord substitutions.
Not only can you choose subs based on their sound quality and harmonic effect, but on the
bass movement they create as well.
Adding in different diatonic and chromatic chords is not only an effective way to create
harmonic interest in your chord melodies; it will allow you to bring a bigger sense of melody
to the bassline as well.
After you’ve learned this arrangement, apply substitutions to any solo guitar standard
you’re working on in the practice room to use this concept in your own playing.
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Joe Pass Chord Melody Style
Any study of chord melody wouldn’t be complete without looking at playing style of the most
recognized solo Jazz guitarist, Joe Pass.
Joe turned the Jazz guitar world upside down with his Virtuoso recordings, and many fans
and players still consider them to be the pinnacle of solo Jazz guitar.
To help you bring a bit of the Joe Pass solo guitar style to your own chord melody
repertoire, here’s a Joe Pass style arrangement and breakdown of the concepts used in
that study.
Musical Textures
The first Joe Pass solo concept is an often-overlooked one, compared to the technical
items, and that’s Joe’s use of textures.
When listening to a Joe Pass solo performance, you’ll notice that he mixes together full
chords, broken chords, arpeggios, scales, octaves, Blues riffs, etc. as he navigates even
one tune.
In the example below, you’ll see many of these textural variations applied to After You’ve
Gone.
As you go through the study, don’t just make note of chord choice and single-note runs.
Keep an eye out for the different textures used in this arrangement to get your ears in tune
with recognizing that side of chord melody.
From there, go back to your favorite Joe Pass recording and make note of the various
textures that you can hear in Joe’s solo guitar arrangements.
Moving from a 2 to 3 note voicing can seem like a small choice, for example.
But, it’s these small textural details that often make Joe’s playing stand out amongst the
rest.
Phrasing
The next element of Joe’s solo guitar playing that you can add to your own vocabulary is
his focus on phrasing.
Joe was a master at Jazz guitar phrasing, as he never played run-on lines even though he
had to the technique to easily do so.
As well, a big part of Joe’s phrasing was his ability to put in pauses, slow down phrases,
and speed up lines in his playing.
One of the best parts of playing solo guitar is that you don’t have to worry about a band
following you, and vice-versa.
If you feel the phrase needs to slow down, then you slow it down.
If you want to hold a pause a bit longer than normal, go for it.
These are the types of small musical choices that can make solo Jazz guitar so effective,
and so much fun to play.
And Joe was a master of making those choices in just the right moments.
When learning the solo guitar arrangement below, you’ll notice that it’s in a new key, D
major compared to Bb major in the other arrangements.
One of the coolest things about playing solo guitar, and something Joe Pass took
advantage of, is you can change the key without worrying about how that affects other
instruments.
To make a melody line easier to harmonize, use certain areas of the fretboard for bass
notes, or even bring open strings into your arrangement, feel free to change the key.
This is something you’ll see in many of Joe Pass’ solo guitar arrangements, including his
famous version of Round Midnight played in E compared to the original Eb.
Chord Substitutions
Joe also loved to spice up his chord progressions when playing Jazz guitar using all, and
more, of the substitutions you learned about earlier in this lesson.
In the study below, you’ll apply ii-V, secondary dominant, dim7 as 7b9, and more Jazz
guitar substitutions to After You’re Gone.
One of the things that made Joe such a genius on the guitar, is that he never really used
advanced substitutions in his playing.
Instead, he went for what was easy, and most importantly, what sounded the best for that
musical situation.
Studying Joe Pass solo guitar arrangements is a big lesson in subtlety and how to
effectively use a few key substitutions for maximum results.
As you’ve already studied these subs in earlier chord melody arrangements, see if you can
spot them in this Joe Pass chord melody.
If you get stuck, or want to check your work, post your thoughts in the comments section
below.
Here’s where Joe really puts his stamp on playing chord melody and solo guitar.
For Joe, the line he’s playing always trumps the form of the tune.
But.
When he was playing a melodic phrase, he let the phrase play out rather than shorten it to
fit the bar he was playing over.
This meant adding in bars of 5/4, 2/4, 3/4, etc. when playing solo guitar arrangements.
You can see an example of this approach in the study below, where a bar of 5/4 is used at
to extend a long, single-note run.
Again, when playing solo guitar you have the freedom to extend your lines in this fashion.
When used properly, as Joe did, using odd-meter bars can be highly effective.
Finding the right moments for these lines, and using them sparingly, is key to finding
success with changing time signatures in your chord melody tunes.
The last Joe Pass solo guitar concept you’ll study in this lesson is the use of riffs vs. the
melody line.
This isn’t the same as putting lines in between the melody line, which Joe was also fond of
doing.
When doing so, Joe played a run and left that section of the melody out of his arrangement,
at least in that chorus of the tune.
As always, this can be a highly effective concept to use in your chord melody playing.
But, if overdone you can lose the sense of melody all together, causing the arrangement to
sound like a solo and not a tune at all.
So, notice where these moments occur in the arrangement below, where the melody line is
missing and a lick is in its place.
Then, go back and listen to your favorite Joe Pass album and notice the moments when
Joe replaces the melody line with a line of his own.
Doing so will give you an idea, and the confidence, to properly use this concept in your own
chord melodies.
Now that you’ve studied the Joe Pass chord melody concepts in this study, it’s time to take
this study onto the fretboard.
It’ll take you some time and practice to get this chord melody under your fingers.
But, it’ll open new doors in your playing, and prepare you to learn a full Joe Pass solo guitar
arrangement as you move forward in your development.
Click to hear
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Bassline Chord Melody
The final approach to building a chord melody, although a very minimal one, is to use a
walking bassline underneath the melody line.
While adding a bassline gives you a new texture to play with in your solo-guitar vocabulary,
it can also provide a new technical challenge to overcome in the woodshed.
This approach can be found by the late, great, guitarist Ted Greene on his Solo Guitar
album, and is quite effective when playing a longer set of chord melody standards.
In the example below, you’ll be adding a walking bassline underneath the melody line,
keeping the melody mostly on the upper 2 strings and the bass notes on the lower 2
strings.
By doing so, you’re leaving yourself room to add in some chords, 3rds and 7ths mostly, in
between those lines if you feel up for the challenge.
As is the case with any chord melody, you’ll need to be flexible with your melody fingering.
Here, there are times when the melody needs to be adjusted from the original fingering to
fit the bassline.
As well, the melody line will drop down to the 3rd string when needed to make the bassline
work more smoothly underneath that line.
If you decide to put chords in between the bass and melody lines, then you might
reconsider some of those fingering choices to make the chords easier to squeeze in
between.
But.
For now, you can begin by learning how to play this example chord melody with a walking
bassline in your studies.
Then, when you’re ready, take a melody you know, pop it up on the top strings, and start to
add bass notes below that melody line.
It may seem like a difficult technique to pull off, and it can be, especially from a fingering
perspective.
But, with time, and some experience in the woodshed, you’ll be able to add this new chord
melody approach to your combo and solo-guitar repertoire.
Click to hear
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