Coltrane changes

In jazz harmony, the Coltrane changes (Coltrane Matrix or cycle, also known as chromatic third relations and multi-tonic changes) are a harmonic progression variation using substitute chords over common jazz chord progressions. These substitution patterns were first demonstrated by jazz musician John Coltrane on the albums Bags & Trane (on the track "Three Little Words") and Cannonball Adderley Quintet in Chicago (on "Limehouse Blues").[1] Coltrane continued his explorations on the 1960 album Giant Steps, and expanded upon the substitution cycle in his compositions "Giant Steps" and "Countdown", the latter of which is a reharmonized version of Eddie Vinson's "Tune Up". The Coltrane changes are a standard advanced harmonic substitution used in jazz improvisation.

The changes serve as a pattern of chord substitutions for the ii–V–I progression (supertonicdominanttonic)  Play  and are noted for the tonally unusual root movement by major thirds (either up or down by a major third interval as opposed to more typical minor or major second intervals, see steps and skips, thus "Giant Steps"), creating an augmented triad.

Influences

David Demsey,[2] saxophonist and Coordinator of Jazz Studies at William Paterson University, cites a number of influences leading toward's Coltrane's development of these changes. After Coltrane's death it was proposed that his "preoccupation with... chromatic third-relations" was inspired by religion or spirituality, with three equal key areas having numerological significance representing a "magic triangle", or, "the trinity, God, or unity."[3] However, as seen above, Demsey shows that though this meaning was of some importance, third relationships were much more "earthly," or rather historical, in origin. Mention should be made of his interests in Indian ragas during the early 1960s, the Trimurti of Vishnu, Brahma and Shiva may well have been an inherent reference in his chromatic third relations, tritone substitutes, and so on.[3]

Miles Davis, who mentored Coltrane in many ways, was in the late 1950s moving toward the modal style demonstrated on Kind of Blue. In playing that style, Coltrane found it "easy to apply the harmonic ideas I had... I started experimenting because I was striving for more individual development."[4] He developed his sheets of sound style while playing with Davis and with pianist Thelonious Monk during this period.[5] It should be noted that saxophonist Odean Pope credits pianist Hasaan Ibn Ali as having been a major influence on Coltrane in his development of the so-called sheets of sound style.[6]

A SeeChord chart of "Have you met Miss Jones?".
SeeChord chart of "Have You Met Miss Jones?"

Coltrane studied harmony with Dennis Sandole and at the Granoff School of Music in Philadelphia. He explored contemporary techniques and theory. He also studied the Thesaurus of Scales and Melodic Patterns by Nicolas Slonimsky (1947),[7] which additionally served as practice material. The first half of Giant Steps (melody and harmony) is contained in the Preface of Slonimsky's book.

Play the chord progression for the "Have You Met Miss Jones?" bridge section

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The bridge of the Rodgers and Hart song and jazz standard "Have You Met Miss Jones?" (1937) predated Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird", after which Coltrane named his "Lazy Bird", by incorporating modulation by major third(s).[8] (highlighted yellow below) "Giant Steps" and "Countdown" may both have taken the inspiration for their augmented tonal cycles from "Have You Met Miss Jones?".[9]

"Have You Met Miss Jones?" B section chord progression (bridge):
BM7   Am7 D7 GM7   Em7 A7 DM7   Am7 D7 GM7   Gm7 C7

Coltrane substitution

ii–V7–I progression in C lasting only two measures  Play .

The Coltrane substitution, Coltrane changes, or "'Countdown' formula" is as follows. Start with a ii–V–I turnaround lasting four measures:

ii7 V7 I I
Dm7 G7 C C

with the dominant chord (V7) preceding the tonic (I).

A SeeChord chart showing a Coltrane substitution.
SeeChord chart of a Coltrane substitution.

One substitutes two chords for each of the first three:[10]

ii7 V7 I
Dm7 E7 A B7 E G7 C
╲╱
m2
╲╱
P4
╲╱
m3
╲╱
P4
╲╱
m3
╲╱
P4

Notice a dominant seventh chord preceding and thus tonicizing a major chord on C and also E and A, both a major third from C.

V7 I V7 I V7 I
E7 A B7 E G7 C
Four-measure ii–V–I progression in C with Coltrane substitution  Play .

This also may begin on C, as on "Giant Steps", giving:

C E7 A B7 E G7 C
╲╱
m3
╲╱
P4
╲╱
m3
╲╱
P4
╲╱
m3
╲╱
P4

Major thirds cycle

The harmonic use of the chromatic third relation originated in the Romantic era and may occur on any structural level, for example in chord progressions or through key changes.[11] The standard Western chromatic scale has twelve equidistant semitones.[12] When arranged according to the circle of fifths, it looks like this:

Precisely because of this equidistancy, the roots of these three chords can produce a destabilizing effect; if C, A and E appear as the tonic pitches of three key areas on a larger level, the identity of the composition's tonal center can only be determined by the closure of the composition.
Demsey (1991)[11]

Looking above at the marked chords from "Have You Met Miss Jones?", B, G and D are spaced a major third apart. On the circle of fifths it appears as an equilateral triangle:

By rotating the triangle, all of the thirds cycles can be shown. Note that there are only four unique thirds cycles. This approach can be generalized; different interval cycles will appear as different polygons on the diagram.

"Tune Up" and "Countdown"

A SeeChord chart.
SeeChord chart of Tune Up.

"Tune Up"

These are the first eight bars of the Miles Davis composition "Tune Up". The chord changes are relatively simple, a straightforward application of the ii–V–I progression, which is extremely common in jazz.

ii V I ii V I
Em7 A7 DM7 DM7 Dm7 G7 CM7 CM7
Play this "Tune Up" excerpt chord progression

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The chord progression is a standard ii7–V7–I progression in D major and then in C major. Assume that the time signature is 4
4
and that each ii and V chord gets four beats and the I chord gets eight beats.

"Countdown"

A SeeChord chart.
SeeChord chart of "Countdown".

The Changes below show Coltrane's substitution of chord changes over "Tune Up". When writing jazz tunes that substitute chords, it is very common to title the tune with a play on words of the name of the original composition, hence "Tune Up" became "Countdown". The ii–V–I progression from "Tune Up" still appears but is enhanced with several transition chords that lead to a more complex harmonic progression.

ii V I ii V I
Em7 F7 BM7 D7 GM7 A7 DM7   Dm7 E7 AM7 B7 EM7 G7 CM7  
Play this "Countdown" excerpt chord progression

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In the standard Coltrane change cycle the ii–V–I is substituted with a progression of chords that cycle back to the V–I at the end. In a 4
4
piece, each chord gets two beats per change.

Coltrane developed this modified chord progression for "Countdown", which is much more complex. At its core, "Countdown" is a variation of "Tune Up", but the harmonic substitutions occur rapidly and trick the listener into thinking that they are listening to a completely unrelated tune. The ii, V and I remain, but in between are other chords (highlighted in yellow and blue) from the major thirds cycle centered around each I. Preceding the first chord of each major thirds cycle is its V chord.

An earlier Coltrane piece, "Lazy Bird", also features two tonal centers a major third apart in its A section.

"Giant Steps"

A SeeChord chart.
SeeChord chart of "Giant Steps".

The "Giant Steps" cycle is the culmination of Coltrane's theories applied to a completely new chord progression. Coltrane uses the cycle in descending major third tonal transpositions in the opening bars and then ascending ii–V–I progressions separated by a major third in the second section of "Giant Steps". The second section is basically the inverse of the bridge section described in "Have You Met Miss Jones" above.

I Coltrane substitution cycle ii V I Coltrane substitution cycle
BM7 D7 GM7 B7 EM7   Am7 D7 GM7 B7 EM7 F7 BM7  
The structure of "Giant Steps" as shown on the circle of fifths.

Ascending/descending ii–V–I progression separated by a major third (tonal centers E, G, B, E, B)

ii V I ii V I ii V I ii V I ii V
Fm7 B7 EM7   Am7 D7 GM7   Cm7 F7 BM7   Fm7 B7 EM7   Cm7 F7

This table shows which scales are used for the different chords:

ChordsScale
BM7B major
D7 → GM7G major
B7 → EM7E major
Am7 → D7 → GM7G major
B7 → EM7E major
F7 → BM7B major
Fm7 → B7 → EM7E major
Am7 → D7 → GM7G major
Cm7 → F7 → BM7B major
Fm7 → B7 → EM7E major
Cm7 → F7B major

Standard substitution

Although "Giant Steps" and "Countdown" are perhaps the most famous examples, both of these compositions use slight variants of the standard Coltrane changes (The first eight bars of "Giant Steps" uses a shortened version that does not return to the I chord, and in "Countdown" the progression begins on ii7 each time.) The standard substitution can be found in several Coltrane compositions and arrangements all recorded around this time. These include: "26-2" (a reharmonization of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation"), "Satellite" (based on the standard "How High the Moon"), the tune "Exotica" (loosely based on the harmonic form of "I Can't Get Started"), Coltrane's arrangement of the standard "But Not for Me", and on the bridge of his arrangement of the famous ballad "Body and Soul".

In addition, Coltrane's tune "Fifth House" (based on "What Is This Thing Called Love") is particularly notable because the standard substitution is implied over an ostinato bass pattern, with nobody actually playing the chord changes. When Coltrane's improvisation superimposes this progression over the ostinato bass, it is easy to hear how he used this concept for his more free playing in later years.

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Porter, Lewis (January 28, 2000). John Coltrane: His Life and Music. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-472-08643-6.
  2. Demsey, David (1996). John Coltrane Plays Giant Steps. Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Corp. ISBN 0-7935-6345-3.
  3. 1 2 Demsey (1991), p.145.
  4. Demsey, David (1991). “Chromatic Third Relations in the Music of John Coltrane”, p.158, Annual Review of Jazz Studies 5: 145-80. ISBN 0-8108-2478-7.
  5. Ruhlmann, William. "John Coltrane Biography", allmusic.com.
  6. Porter, Lewis; DeVito, Chris; WIld, David; Fujioka, Yasuhiro; Schmaler, Wolf (2007). The John Coltrane Reference. The book cites Cadence, February 1989, pages 6-7, interview of Odean Pope by Ludwig Van Trikt from September 7, 1987. London: Routledge. pp. unnumbered page in section 1955 Chronology, sub–section Hasaan, Trane, and Odean Pope. ISBN 978-0415977555.
  7. Porter, Lewis (January 28, 2000). John Coltrane: His Life and Music. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-472-08643-6.
  8. Lyon, Jason (2007). "Coltrane's Substitution Tunes", in www.opus28.co.uk/jazzarticles.html.
  9. Christiansen, Corey (2007). "Coltrane-Style II–V–Is", Guitar Player Jun; 41, 6.
  10. Baker, David (1990). Modern Concepts in Jazz Improvisation, p.92-93. ISBN 0-7390-2907-X.
  11. 1 2 Demsey (1991), p.146-147.
  12. Proctor, Gregory (1978). Nineteenth-Century Chromatic Tonality: A Study in Chromaticism, p.150. Ph.D., Diss., Princeton. Cited in Demsey (1991), p.148.
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