Chords for Herbie Hancock on Music Theory
Tempo:
127.95 bpm
Chords used:
D
Dm
G
F
Em
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Sometimes our creativity can be flowing, but I'm sure that many of us have
experienced periods when there has been some kind of blockage to our
imagination.
Many, many years ago I was challenged and frustrated with my own
playing and as a result became a bit depressed.
It's disheartening, right?
I
seemed to be playing the same stuff over and over again.
I was stuck in
familiarity and somehow couldn't get out of the rut.
This happened one night at
Lenny's on the Turnpike, a well-known jazz club in Peabody, about half an hour
or so from here.
I was on stage with the Miles Davis Quintet, which included Ron
Carter, Tony Williams, and Wayne Shorter.
I was really in a rut that
night.
Everything I played sounded the same.
Miles could sense my sense of
frustration, so he leaned over to me and said, don't play the butter notes.
The
butter notes?
What could he possibly mean?
But since it came from Miles, I knew it
had to mean something.
So I figured that he meant don't play the obvious notes
because I was thinking butter might mean fat and fat might mean obvious.
Doesn't apply to the body, so.
The most obvious notes might be the third and
seventh of a chord because they define the nature of the chord.
I realized if I
left out the third and seventh notes, I'd have a lot of other notes that could
work without confining my solos to the obvious restricted interpretation.
This
would allow the harmonies to be opened up to various views.
So I'm going to show
you what I mean by that.
[D]
In a way, music is like math.
So if you're playing a
[F] scale, [Bbm] this
[D]
is one, [Db] [F] that's three, that's five.
And [Db] this is seven, it's a major seventh, [Dm] [Ab] it's a dominant [Dm] seven.
So the third is whether it's minor [D] or major.
And the seventh can tell you whether it might [G] go here [D] [G]
or it might be [D]
a place where you might end up.
So in a song, let's [Dm] take [F] something that might be in what we say D minor.
[D]
The old way of thinking that got me into a rut was thinking, being used to having the [F] third and [Em] the seventh
[Bbm] in a [Dm] chord.
[G]
[A] [Dm]
[G] [Dm]
Okay.
Now if you leave out the third, [Fm]
[G] [Fm] you have these other notes that you can play.
[D]
[G]
[D]
[A]
[Am] [Bb]
[Em] [D] [C]
[Am] [A]
[Gbm]
[Gm] [D] So it just gives you more possibilities of things you can play.
[Am] [D]
[C] [D]
So that kind of freed me from just being kind of stuck in.
[F] [Em]
[D] [Dm] [G] Now, I didn't throw away playing that way, [N] but I included something brand new for me at the time.
So even though when I played the next solo, it felt
cumbersome and sounded erratic, to my surprise, the audience responded positively and gave me excellent feedback.
I believe within this raw exploration, they felt my openness and my desire to try something imaginative.
I used Miles's suggestion as an exercise and this experience became groundbreaking for me and opened the doorway to the future of my performances.
Not only did it affect my style of playing throughout the rest of my life, it taught me the valuable lessons of courage, conviction, confidence, and trust.
Ethics.
Miles could feel my frustration and through his compassion for me and his respect for my feelings, he made the wisest of comments.
Only a great master can provide a path to finding your own true answers.
I was then able to translate Miles's guidance to my future bandmates and students.
Reach up while reaching down.
Grow while helping others.
While we're in the process of moving forward, bring others with you.
This mentor-apprentice relationship runs freely through the jazz world.
We don't hide our discoveries from other musicians.
In fact, it's quite the opposite.
It's not unusual to hear a musician say, hey, I found this scale that's really cool, or check out the voicing for this chord.
That's the spirit and the wisdom of Miles Davis and the ethics of jazz.
So always remember, don't play to butter notes.
experienced periods when there has been some kind of blockage to our
imagination.
Many, many years ago I was challenged and frustrated with my own
playing and as a result became a bit depressed.
It's disheartening, right?
I
seemed to be playing the same stuff over and over again.
I was stuck in
familiarity and somehow couldn't get out of the rut.
This happened one night at
Lenny's on the Turnpike, a well-known jazz club in Peabody, about half an hour
or so from here.
I was on stage with the Miles Davis Quintet, which included Ron
Carter, Tony Williams, and Wayne Shorter.
I was really in a rut that
night.
Everything I played sounded the same.
Miles could sense my sense of
frustration, so he leaned over to me and said, don't play the butter notes.
The
butter notes?
What could he possibly mean?
But since it came from Miles, I knew it
had to mean something.
So I figured that he meant don't play the obvious notes
because I was thinking butter might mean fat and fat might mean obvious.
Doesn't apply to the body, so.
The most obvious notes might be the third and
seventh of a chord because they define the nature of the chord.
I realized if I
left out the third and seventh notes, I'd have a lot of other notes that could
work without confining my solos to the obvious restricted interpretation.
This
would allow the harmonies to be opened up to various views.
So I'm going to show
you what I mean by that.
[D]
In a way, music is like math.
So if you're playing a
[F] scale, [Bbm] this
[D]
is one, [Db] [F] that's three, that's five.
And [Db] this is seven, it's a major seventh, [Dm] [Ab] it's a dominant [Dm] seven.
So the third is whether it's minor [D] or major.
And the seventh can tell you whether it might [G] go here [D] [G]
or it might be [D]
a place where you might end up.
So in a song, let's [Dm] take [F] something that might be in what we say D minor.
[D]
The old way of thinking that got me into a rut was thinking, being used to having the [F] third and [Em] the seventh
[Bbm] in a [Dm] chord.
[G]
[A] [Dm]
[G] [Dm]
Okay.
Now if you leave out the third, [Fm]
[G] [Fm] you have these other notes that you can play.
[D]
[G]
[D]
[A]
[Am] [Bb]
[Em] [D] [C]
[Am] [A]
[Gbm]
[Gm] [D] So it just gives you more possibilities of things you can play.
[Am] [D]
[C] [D]
So that kind of freed me from just being kind of stuck in.
[F] [Em]
[D] [Dm] [G] Now, I didn't throw away playing that way, [N] but I included something brand new for me at the time.
So even though when I played the next solo, it felt
cumbersome and sounded erratic, to my surprise, the audience responded positively and gave me excellent feedback.
I believe within this raw exploration, they felt my openness and my desire to try something imaginative.
I used Miles's suggestion as an exercise and this experience became groundbreaking for me and opened the doorway to the future of my performances.
Not only did it affect my style of playing throughout the rest of my life, it taught me the valuable lessons of courage, conviction, confidence, and trust.
Ethics.
Miles could feel my frustration and through his compassion for me and his respect for my feelings, he made the wisest of comments.
Only a great master can provide a path to finding your own true answers.
I was then able to translate Miles's guidance to my future bandmates and students.
Reach up while reaching down.
Grow while helping others.
While we're in the process of moving forward, bring others with you.
This mentor-apprentice relationship runs freely through the jazz world.
We don't hide our discoveries from other musicians.
In fact, it's quite the opposite.
It's not unusual to hear a musician say, hey, I found this scale that's really cool, or check out the voicing for this chord.
That's the spirit and the wisdom of Miles Davis and the ethics of jazz.
So always remember, don't play to butter notes.
Key:
D
Dm
G
F
Em
D
Dm
G
_ _ Sometimes our creativity can be flowing, _ _ but I'm sure that many of us have
experienced periods when there has been some kind of _ blockage to our _
imagination.
_ _ _ Many, many years ago I was challenged and frustrated with my own
playing and as a result _ became a bit _ depressed.
_ _ It's disheartening, right?
_ _ _ I
seemed to be playing the same stuff over and over again.
I was stuck in
familiarity and somehow couldn't get out of the rut.
_ _ _ This happened one night at
Lenny's on the Turnpike, a well-known jazz club in Peabody, _ about half an hour
or so from here. _ _ _
I was on stage with the Miles Davis Quintet, which included Ron
Carter, Tony Williams, and Wayne Shorter. _ _
I was really in a rut that _ _
night.
Everything I played sounded the same.
_ _ _ Miles could sense my sense of
frustration, so he leaned over to me and said, _ _ don't play the butter notes.
_ The _
_ _ _ butter notes?
_ _ What _ _ _ could he possibly mean? _
_ _ _ But since it came from Miles, I knew it
had to mean something. _ _ _
_ _ So _ I figured that he meant _ don't play the obvious notes
because I was thinking butter _ might mean fat and fat might mean obvious.
_ _ _ Doesn't _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ apply to the body, so.
_ _ The most obvious notes might be the third and
seventh of a chord because they define the nature of the chord.
_ I realized if I
left out the third and seventh notes, I'd have a lot of other notes that could
_ work without confining my solos to the obvious restricted interpretation.
_ This
would allow the harmonies to be opened up to various views. _
So I'm going to show
you _ what I mean by that. _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ In a way, music is like math.
_ _ So _ if _ _ you're playing a _ _ _ _
_ [F] _ scale, [Bbm] this _
_ [D] _ _ _ _ _
_ is one, [Db] [F] that's three, that's five. _ _
_ _ And [Db] this is seven, _ _ _ it's a major seventh, _ [Dm] _ [Ab] it's a dominant [Dm] seven.
So the third is whether it's minor [D] or major. _
And the seventh can _ tell you whether it might [G] go here _ [D] _ [G] _ _
_ or it might be _ [D]
a _ _ _ _ _ _ place where you might end up.
_ _ So in a song, _ _ let's [Dm] take _ [F] something that might be in what we say D minor.
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ The old way of thinking that got me into a rut was thinking, _ _ _ _ being _ used to having the [F] third _ and [Em] the seventh _ _
_ [Bbm] in a [Dm] chord.
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
[A] _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [Dm] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ Okay. _ _
Now if you leave out the third, _ [Fm] _ _
[G] _ _ [Fm] you _ _ _ _ _ _ _
have these other notes that you can play.
_ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Am] _ _ [Bb] _
_ [Em] _ _ _ [D] _ [C] _
_ [Am] _ _ _ [A] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
_ [Gm] _ [D] _ _ So it just gives you more possibilities of things you can play.
_ _ _ [Am] _ [D] _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ So that kind of freed me from _ _ just being kind of stuck in.
[F] _ _ [Em] _ _
_ [D] _ _ [Dm] _ [G] Now, _ _ _ I didn't throw away playing that way, _ [N] _ but I included _ something brand new for me at the time.
_ _ So even though _ when I played the next solo, it felt
cumbersome and sounded _ erratic, to my surprise, the audience _ responded positively and gave me excellent feedback.
_ _ I believe _ within this raw exploration, they felt my openness _ and my desire to try something imaginative.
_ _ _ I used Miles's suggestion as an exercise and this experience _ became groundbreaking for me and opened the doorway to the future of my performances.
_ _ Not only did it affect my style of playing throughout the rest of my life, it taught me the valuable lessons of courage, _ _ conviction, _ _ confidence, and trust. _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _
Ethics.
Miles could feel my frustration and through his compassion for me and his respect for my feelings, _ he made the wisest of comments. _
_ Only a great master can provide a path to finding your own true answers. _
I _ _ was then able to translate Miles's guidance to my future bandmates and students.
_ _ _ _ Reach up while reaching down.
_ _ _ Grow _ while helping others. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
While we're in the process of moving forward, _ _ _ bring others with you.
_ _ _ _ _ _
This mentor-apprentice relationship _ runs freely through the jazz world.
We don't hide our discoveries from other musicians.
In fact, it's quite the opposite.
_ _ It's not unusual to hear a musician say, hey, I found this scale that's really cool, or _ check out the voicing for this chord.
_ _ _ That's the spirit _ and the wisdom of Miles Davis _ and the ethics of jazz. _
_ So always remember, _ _ _ don't play to butter notes.
experienced periods when there has been some kind of _ blockage to our _
imagination.
_ _ _ Many, many years ago I was challenged and frustrated with my own
playing and as a result _ became a bit _ depressed.
_ _ It's disheartening, right?
_ _ _ I
seemed to be playing the same stuff over and over again.
I was stuck in
familiarity and somehow couldn't get out of the rut.
_ _ _ This happened one night at
Lenny's on the Turnpike, a well-known jazz club in Peabody, _ about half an hour
or so from here. _ _ _
I was on stage with the Miles Davis Quintet, which included Ron
Carter, Tony Williams, and Wayne Shorter. _ _
I was really in a rut that _ _
night.
Everything I played sounded the same.
_ _ _ Miles could sense my sense of
frustration, so he leaned over to me and said, _ _ don't play the butter notes.
_ The _
_ _ _ butter notes?
_ _ What _ _ _ could he possibly mean? _
_ _ _ But since it came from Miles, I knew it
had to mean something. _ _ _
_ _ So _ I figured that he meant _ don't play the obvious notes
because I was thinking butter _ might mean fat and fat might mean obvious.
_ _ _ Doesn't _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ apply to the body, so.
_ _ The most obvious notes might be the third and
seventh of a chord because they define the nature of the chord.
_ I realized if I
left out the third and seventh notes, I'd have a lot of other notes that could
_ work without confining my solos to the obvious restricted interpretation.
_ This
would allow the harmonies to be opened up to various views. _
So I'm going to show
you _ what I mean by that. _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ In a way, music is like math.
_ _ So _ if _ _ you're playing a _ _ _ _
_ [F] _ scale, [Bbm] this _
_ [D] _ _ _ _ _
_ is one, [Db] [F] that's three, that's five. _ _
_ _ And [Db] this is seven, _ _ _ it's a major seventh, _ [Dm] _ [Ab] it's a dominant [Dm] seven.
So the third is whether it's minor [D] or major. _
And the seventh can _ tell you whether it might [G] go here _ [D] _ [G] _ _
_ or it might be _ [D]
a _ _ _ _ _ _ place where you might end up.
_ _ So in a song, _ _ let's [Dm] take _ [F] something that might be in what we say D minor.
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ The old way of thinking that got me into a rut was thinking, _ _ _ _ being _ used to having the [F] third _ and [Em] the seventh _ _
_ [Bbm] in a [Dm] chord.
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
[A] _ [Dm] _ _ _ _ _
[G] _ _ _ _ [Dm] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ Okay. _ _
Now if you leave out the third, _ [Fm] _ _
[G] _ _ [Fm] you _ _ _ _ _ _ _
have these other notes that you can play.
_ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _
_ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Am] _ _ [Bb] _
_ [Em] _ _ _ [D] _ [C] _
_ [Am] _ _ _ [A] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
_ [Gm] _ [D] _ _ So it just gives you more possibilities of things you can play.
_ _ _ [Am] _ [D] _ _
[C] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ So that kind of freed me from _ _ just being kind of stuck in.
[F] _ _ [Em] _ _
_ [D] _ _ [Dm] _ [G] Now, _ _ _ I didn't throw away playing that way, _ [N] _ but I included _ something brand new for me at the time.
_ _ So even though _ when I played the next solo, it felt
cumbersome and sounded _ erratic, to my surprise, the audience _ responded positively and gave me excellent feedback.
_ _ I believe _ within this raw exploration, they felt my openness _ and my desire to try something imaginative.
_ _ _ I used Miles's suggestion as an exercise and this experience _ became groundbreaking for me and opened the doorway to the future of my performances.
_ _ Not only did it affect my style of playing throughout the rest of my life, it taught me the valuable lessons of courage, _ _ conviction, _ _ confidence, and trust. _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _
Ethics.
Miles could feel my frustration and through his compassion for me and his respect for my feelings, _ he made the wisest of comments. _
_ Only a great master can provide a path to finding your own true answers. _
I _ _ was then able to translate Miles's guidance to my future bandmates and students.
_ _ _ _ Reach up while reaching down.
_ _ _ Grow _ while helping others. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
While we're in the process of moving forward, _ _ _ bring others with you.
_ _ _ _ _ _
This mentor-apprentice relationship _ runs freely through the jazz world.
We don't hide our discoveries from other musicians.
In fact, it's quite the opposite.
_ _ It's not unusual to hear a musician say, hey, I found this scale that's really cool, or _ check out the voicing for this chord.
_ _ _ That's the spirit _ and the wisdom of Miles Davis _ and the ethics of jazz. _
_ So always remember, _ _ _ don't play to butter notes.