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Backdoor Chord Progressions
Backdoor Chord Progressions
In jazz and jazz harmony, the chord progression from iv7 to ♭VII7 to I has been nicknamed the backdoor progression or the backdoor II-V. This name derives from an assumption that the normal progression to the tonic, the II-V-I turnaround (II-V7 to I, see also authentic cadence) is, by inference, the front door. It can be considered a minor plagal cadence in traditional theory (see minor scale and plagal cadence).
"Backdoor" also refers to the unexpected modulation created through the substitution of the highly similar IMA9 for IImi7 (in C: EGBD and CEGBD) at the end of the II-V turnaround to III (II/III=IV, V/III=♭VII, III), thus arriving at 'home' (the tonic) through unexpected means, the 'back' instead of the 'front door'(IIIm7, EGBD, being entirely contained within IMA9, CEGBD, and the seventh still resolving downward). If the ii-V-I turnaround is an applied dominant (V/V-V-I), then the backdoor progression may be termed an "applied subdominant" (IV-IV/IV-I).[citation needed]
The backdoor II-V is considered a "bluesy" cadence and IV-♭VII-I is used repeatedly as a chord substitution, along with tritone substitution, in "Lazy Bird," John Coltrane's arrangement of Tadd Dameron's "Lady Bird."
The backdoor progression can be found in popular jazz standards in such places as measures 7 and 8 of the A section of "Cherokee," measures 9 and 11 of "My Romance" or measures 10 and 28 of "There Will Never Be Another You," as well as Beatles songs like "In My Life" and "If I Fell."
- WidipediA: Backdoor Chord Progressions
Songs
- Lady Bird
- In My Life
- If I Fell
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A Guide to Ukulele Chords - 2nd Edition
A Guide to Ukulele Chords is designed as a guide to ukulele (pronounced “oo-koo-lele”) chords. Covering the basic ukulele chords that ALL ukulele players SHOULD know. A Guide to Ukulele Chords covers movable chord forms, rock chords, how to transpose chords, learning the ukulele fingerboard and includes an introduction to 4-part, a.k.a “jazz” chords and more...
From a few “core, basic chord shapes and a understanding of how chords are constructed. Your chord vocabulary can be dramatically increased without memorizing countless chord shapes. There are too many chord shapes to memorize.
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BACKDOOR_CHORD_PROGRESSION.PHP | Updated: Sunday, 14th August, 2011 @ 08:36pm