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You use them wherever you can't fit an abolished or demented chord.Gary Arnold wrote:Where or when do you use these chords?![]()
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Thanks, Gary
You use them when the rest of the band uses them. If they don't (but should) and you do, you stand out like a sore thumb. If they do (but shouldn't) and you don't, you stand out like a sore thumb.Gary Arnold wrote:Where or when do you use these chords?..
Not correct. Dims and augs can be used as momentary passing chords with great effect if the proper amount of time or emphasis is placed on them by the soloist.Raybob Bowman wrote:You use them when the rest of the band uses them. If they don't (but should) and you do, you stand out like a sore thumb. If they do (but shouldn't) and you don't, you stand out like a sore thumb.
This is correct if you say scale instead of chord. There are lots of dim and aug chords. Augmented chords work every 4 frets (for normal songs). They seem to work every 2 frets better for playing jazz. But recognizing the difference is important. Every 4 frets has more chord tones, making it still sound like you are augmenting a chord, rather than just jumping into the wholetone scale.There are only 3 dim chords and 2 aug chords so you have a 33.333% chance with the dim chord and a 50% chance with the aug chord to get it right.
True but if the band pays a 4# diminished and the steeler is still playing the 4 chord, talk about tension!Herb Steiner wrote:...Generally, dominant chords (those with b7 notes), diminished, and augmented chords are considered "tension" chords, and are thus seeking "resolution" chords... predominantly major chords and non-dominant minor chords.
Tension chords tell the listener "we're going somewhere with this sound," and resolution chords announce "okay, we're there; at least for the time being."