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The tune has since become a jazz standard, performed and recorded numerous times by a wide array of musical talents. The Benny Goodman Quartet with Teddy Wilson, Gene Krupa and Lionel Hampton made a famous version of the song in 1936, Artie Shaw recorded it in 1941, and Harry James recorded it in 1946 (released in 1950) on Columbia 38943.
The term sixth chord refers to two different kinds of chord, the first in classical music and the second in modern popular music. [1] [2]The original meaning of the term is a chord in first inversion, in other words with its third in the bass and its root a sixth above it.
Major sixth ninth chord ("6 add 9", [2] Nine six, [3] 6/9) Play ... List of chords. 1 language ...
The following "curious chromatic sequence", [28] graphed by Dmitri Tymoczko as a four-dimensional tesseract, [29] outlines the relationships between the augmented sixth chords in 12TET tuning: A tesseract. The diminished seventh chords occupy points on two diagonally opposite corners. Starting with a diminished seventh chord, lower any factor ...
Woody Herman / Jackson / Burns "I Got Rhythm" 1930 George Gershwin "Nostalgia" [1] Fats Navarro "Out of Nowhere" 1931: Johnny Green "Not You Again" [citation needed] John Scofield "There Will Never Be Another You" 1942: Harry Warren "Now He Beats The Drum,Now He Stops" [citation needed] Chick Corea "How Deep Is The Ocean" 1932: Irving Berlin
"Jumpin' Jive" was covered by new wave artist Joe Jackson (under the band name Joe Jackson's Jumpin' Jive) on his 1981 album of the same name. The album, originally conceived as "a few pub gigs for a laugh," also featured other jump-blues tracks, including Calloway's "We the Cats (Shall Hep Ya)."
It is a depiction of some guys who used to be on Hutcherson's doorstep, stoned. "It's a blues," says Hutcherson, "but the changes are different than the usual blues chords." Side two features Chambers originals. "Movement" is "like a six-part theme constantly in motion, held together by a pulse."
Seven six chord on C (C 7/6). Play ⓘ In music, a seven six chord is a chord containing both factors a sixth and a seventh above the root, making it both an added chord and a seventh chord. However, the term may mean the first inversion of an added ninth chord (E–G–C–D). [1] It can be written as 7/6 and 7,6. [2]