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What is chord melody?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?In traditional (tonal) harmony, how is the word “sonority” used?Another word for shotsWhat is the definition of 'playing in the pocket'?What is the difference between alto and tenor saxophone in the lines they produce?When Would You Name a Chord B vs Cb?What speed should I achieve for 8th note exersizes on the guitarDescending Minor7♭5 Introduction/Motif QuestionsHow do Jazz pianists learn to improvise and make up chord progressions that make it sound more complicated than it actually is?How to analyze this melody in modal/Jazz theory?How does modal jazz use chord progressions?
I've heard the term "chord melody" used by a jazz player acquaintance of mine, but I'm not really certain what he is describing or how it works. Would someone please give me a definition in easy to understand language and describe how it works?
guitar technique terminology jazz
add a comment |
I've heard the term "chord melody" used by a jazz player acquaintance of mine, but I'm not really certain what he is describing or how it works. Would someone please give me a definition in easy to understand language and describe how it works?
guitar technique terminology jazz
Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I've heard the term "chord melody" used by a jazz player acquaintance of mine, but I'm not really certain what he is describing or how it works. Would someone please give me a definition in easy to understand language and describe how it works?
guitar technique terminology jazz
I've heard the term "chord melody" used by a jazz player acquaintance of mine, but I'm not really certain what he is describing or how it works. Would someone please give me a definition in easy to understand language and describe how it works?
guitar technique terminology jazz
guitar technique terminology jazz
asked 6 hours ago
skinny peacockskinny peacock
2,2252324
2,2252324
Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago
Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago
Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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Songs have a melody that's harmonized with chords. A chord melody is an arrangement that places the melody note in the soprano of each chord (and plays individual non-harmonic melody notes above the chord of the harmony).
On the guitar, that means choosing specific chord voicings that have the melody note as the highest tone.
Take this simple melody (Happy Birthday):
A simple chord melody arrangement might look like this:
In some spots it can mean reharmonizing (I used a G chord on beat 2 of the sixth measure instead of the F) and in spots it can look like a reharmonization (in measure 1, beat 2 you can view the soprano A as a non-harmonic tone over the C chord, or you can think of it as a substitution of C6 for C)
I did this off the top of my head, so I kept all chords playable within the first four strings. If I was writing an arrangement that I'd actually play, I'd put more thought into the voicings, use more of the guitar's range, and perhaps have a counterpoint in the bass line... but it should give you the basic idea.
EDIT: It occurred to me that you might wonder why the arrangment has the melody an octave higher...
The guitar is a transposing instrument, sounding an octave lower than written. As I was writing it out as a guitar part, I move the notes without even thinking about it - the third space C in the chord melody will sound as middle C, so the melody/soprano is actually identical in both examples.
add a comment |
Chord melody consists of both melody and harmony playing together at the same time.
- Melody = Solo (Horizontal)
- Harmony = Chord (Vertical)
Doing the arrangement by creating harmony around the melody line. Here is a good example:
New contributor
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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active
oldest
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Songs have a melody that's harmonized with chords. A chord melody is an arrangement that places the melody note in the soprano of each chord (and plays individual non-harmonic melody notes above the chord of the harmony).
On the guitar, that means choosing specific chord voicings that have the melody note as the highest tone.
Take this simple melody (Happy Birthday):
A simple chord melody arrangement might look like this:
In some spots it can mean reharmonizing (I used a G chord on beat 2 of the sixth measure instead of the F) and in spots it can look like a reharmonization (in measure 1, beat 2 you can view the soprano A as a non-harmonic tone over the C chord, or you can think of it as a substitution of C6 for C)
I did this off the top of my head, so I kept all chords playable within the first four strings. If I was writing an arrangement that I'd actually play, I'd put more thought into the voicings, use more of the guitar's range, and perhaps have a counterpoint in the bass line... but it should give you the basic idea.
EDIT: It occurred to me that you might wonder why the arrangment has the melody an octave higher...
The guitar is a transposing instrument, sounding an octave lower than written. As I was writing it out as a guitar part, I move the notes without even thinking about it - the third space C in the chord melody will sound as middle C, so the melody/soprano is actually identical in both examples.
add a comment |
Songs have a melody that's harmonized with chords. A chord melody is an arrangement that places the melody note in the soprano of each chord (and plays individual non-harmonic melody notes above the chord of the harmony).
On the guitar, that means choosing specific chord voicings that have the melody note as the highest tone.
Take this simple melody (Happy Birthday):
A simple chord melody arrangement might look like this:
In some spots it can mean reharmonizing (I used a G chord on beat 2 of the sixth measure instead of the F) and in spots it can look like a reharmonization (in measure 1, beat 2 you can view the soprano A as a non-harmonic tone over the C chord, or you can think of it as a substitution of C6 for C)
I did this off the top of my head, so I kept all chords playable within the first four strings. If I was writing an arrangement that I'd actually play, I'd put more thought into the voicings, use more of the guitar's range, and perhaps have a counterpoint in the bass line... but it should give you the basic idea.
EDIT: It occurred to me that you might wonder why the arrangment has the melody an octave higher...
The guitar is a transposing instrument, sounding an octave lower than written. As I was writing it out as a guitar part, I move the notes without even thinking about it - the third space C in the chord melody will sound as middle C, so the melody/soprano is actually identical in both examples.
add a comment |
Songs have a melody that's harmonized with chords. A chord melody is an arrangement that places the melody note in the soprano of each chord (and plays individual non-harmonic melody notes above the chord of the harmony).
On the guitar, that means choosing specific chord voicings that have the melody note as the highest tone.
Take this simple melody (Happy Birthday):
A simple chord melody arrangement might look like this:
In some spots it can mean reharmonizing (I used a G chord on beat 2 of the sixth measure instead of the F) and in spots it can look like a reharmonization (in measure 1, beat 2 you can view the soprano A as a non-harmonic tone over the C chord, or you can think of it as a substitution of C6 for C)
I did this off the top of my head, so I kept all chords playable within the first four strings. If I was writing an arrangement that I'd actually play, I'd put more thought into the voicings, use more of the guitar's range, and perhaps have a counterpoint in the bass line... but it should give you the basic idea.
EDIT: It occurred to me that you might wonder why the arrangment has the melody an octave higher...
The guitar is a transposing instrument, sounding an octave lower than written. As I was writing it out as a guitar part, I move the notes without even thinking about it - the third space C in the chord melody will sound as middle C, so the melody/soprano is actually identical in both examples.
Songs have a melody that's harmonized with chords. A chord melody is an arrangement that places the melody note in the soprano of each chord (and plays individual non-harmonic melody notes above the chord of the harmony).
On the guitar, that means choosing specific chord voicings that have the melody note as the highest tone.
Take this simple melody (Happy Birthday):
A simple chord melody arrangement might look like this:
In some spots it can mean reharmonizing (I used a G chord on beat 2 of the sixth measure instead of the F) and in spots it can look like a reharmonization (in measure 1, beat 2 you can view the soprano A as a non-harmonic tone over the C chord, or you can think of it as a substitution of C6 for C)
I did this off the top of my head, so I kept all chords playable within the first four strings. If I was writing an arrangement that I'd actually play, I'd put more thought into the voicings, use more of the guitar's range, and perhaps have a counterpoint in the bass line... but it should give you the basic idea.
EDIT: It occurred to me that you might wonder why the arrangment has the melody an octave higher...
The guitar is a transposing instrument, sounding an octave lower than written. As I was writing it out as a guitar part, I move the notes without even thinking about it - the third space C in the chord melody will sound as middle C, so the melody/soprano is actually identical in both examples.
answered 4 hours ago
Tom SerbTom Serb
1,347110
1,347110
add a comment |
add a comment |
Chord melody consists of both melody and harmony playing together at the same time.
- Melody = Solo (Horizontal)
- Harmony = Chord (Vertical)
Doing the arrangement by creating harmony around the melody line. Here is a good example:
New contributor
add a comment |
Chord melody consists of both melody and harmony playing together at the same time.
- Melody = Solo (Horizontal)
- Harmony = Chord (Vertical)
Doing the arrangement by creating harmony around the melody line. Here is a good example:
New contributor
add a comment |
Chord melody consists of both melody and harmony playing together at the same time.
- Melody = Solo (Horizontal)
- Harmony = Chord (Vertical)
Doing the arrangement by creating harmony around the melody line. Here is a good example:
New contributor
Chord melody consists of both melody and harmony playing together at the same time.
- Melody = Solo (Horizontal)
- Harmony = Chord (Vertical)
Doing the arrangement by creating harmony around the melody line. Here is a good example:
New contributor
New contributor
answered 6 hours ago
user506602user506602
61
61
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Possible duplicate of Chord Melody vs Chord Solo: Are these terms interchangeable?
– Your Uncle Bob
6 hours ago