Welcome, Visitor Number

Translate

Showing posts with label final eight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label final eight. Show all posts

3 November 2017

Post 565: ESSENTIAL TO MASTER - SUNSHINE CHORD PROGRESSION

If you want to play jazz, one of the most important things to master is The Sunshine Chord Progression. It occurs time and again in our tunes, particularly in the final eight bars (measures) of 32-bar songs. It feels so right and natural as a musical progression - taking the listener through a sequence of chords all related to the tonic, and eventually - after a brief 'circle of fifths' - landing happily on that tonic chord.

You should practise improvising on this progression in all the usual keys. This will give a terrific boost to your playing. 

I was told by a banjo-playing friend that it derived its name from the great English clarinet player Monty Sunshine (1928 - 2010); but I doubt whether that is the correct derivation, because The Sunshine Progression was used in hundreds of tunes well before Monty was born.

Maybe it's called the 'Sunshine' progression simply because it seems to be so 'sunny' - in the sense that it is so bright, happy and perfect.
Monty Sunshine

It's interesting (and it makes life easier for the performer) that so many tunes played by the traditional jazz bands end with the same simple and pleasing sequence of chords. Here are those chords in the key of C.


What they amount to is:

Bar 1 : Major chord on the fourth note of the scale - setting out on a new adventure.

Bar 2 : Minor chord on the fourth note of the scale - a slight hint of danger.

Bar 3 : The Major Chord of the Home Key - We're safe!

Bar 4 : A Seventh based on the sixth note of the scale - Oh no, someone has just made us laugh.

Bar 5 : A Seventh based on the second note of the scale - one corner yet to turn.

Bar 6 : The Dominant Seventh - always the last step before Home.

Bars 7 and 8 : The Major Chord of the Home Key again - this time for good.

Here's how it looks in the Key of G:



There can be very slight variations. For example Bar 2 is often IV# diminished (i.e. C# diminished in the example above). Bar 5 can be a Minor Seventh based on the second note of the scale. The final two bars could throw in, for example, the major chord on the fourth note of the scale for the final two beats of Bar 7. But essentially it's all the same pattern.



Here are just a few examples of tunes ending with the sequence:


All of Me
April Showers
At The Mardi Gras
Baby Face
Beneath Hawaiian Skies
Bill Bailey
Bourbon Street Parade
Coney Island Washboard
Darktown Strutters Ball
From Monday On
Hiawatha Rag [final theme]
I'm Looking Over a Four-Leaf Clover
If I Had A Talking Picture Of You
If Someone Would Only Love Me
It's a Sin to tell a Lie
It's Only a Shanty
Knee Drops
Martha
Merci Beaucoup
Milenberg Joys
My Little Girl
Running Wild
Second Line
Shine
Some of these Days
Spanish Eyes
Tell Me Your Dream
Tiger Rag
Too Late (the Dave Nelson - King Oliver composition introduced into Tuba Skinny's repertoire in 2018)
Who's Sorry Now

Some tunes essentially use the Sunshine sequence, though with slight or subtle variations.

An example is

I Can't Give You Anything But Love

and, as my friend John Burns has pointed out to me, the chords of the eight bars are sometimes compressed into four half-bars, as in



At the Jazzband Ball
When I'm Sixty-Four.



Finally, here's something I find striking: the following tunes BEGIN pretty well with the eight bars that the tunes above use as their FINAL eight. I think that's what gives them their special character:



After You've Gone

I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me

Glad Rag Doll
That's My Home
When It's Sleepy Time Down South.

Correspondent Tom Corcoran let me know what a pleasure it can be to experiment with 1st inversions while running through the sequence. He says he tried it on his ukulele: starting at the first inversion of C and going up up the neck to the other chords; and I realised what a sweet progression it really is. The right chords in the right place made all the difference. Playing around with other progressions I've found some that work well in first-position chords and others that sound better in a descending pattern, depending on the mood of the melody I suppose. Always a new twist and always something new to learn.

16 March 2013

Post 16: TUNES WITH 'BILL BAILEY' CHORDS

It is well known that the 32-bar chord progression used in Won't You Come Home, Bill Bailey? is found in many other tunes. This progression uses 'The Sunshine Sequence' in the final eight bars.

The Bill Bailey Progression

 I   |   I   |  I   |   I   |  I  |   I   |  V7   |   V7   |

 V7 |  V7  |  V7  |  V7 |  V7  |  V7  |  I  |  I  |

 I    |  I  |    I    |   I    |   I  |  I7  |   IV  |  IV   |

 IV  |  IVm  |  I  |   VI7   |  II7  |  V7  |  I:IV |  I

I have been sent a list of tunes that are said to use the sequence. 

I can't confirm that these tunes really are all based on the Bill Bailey Progression because there are tunes on this list that are unknown to me. However, I recognise most of them and know that they do indeed use the sequence.

339 Rag
Allez Vous En
Amapola (for the first 24 bars) 
Ancient Bottle Strut
At The Mardi Gras
Baby Face 
Beer Barrel Polka ('Roll out the barrel' strain)
Black Maria (final strain)
Bourbon Street Parade
Boys From Harlem
Ciri Ciri Bin 
Clink, Clink, Another Drink
Could Be
Creole Rag
Daybreak Express
Don't Give Up the Ship
Down in New Orleans
Fireworks (first strain)
First Choice
Golden Leaf Strut 
Good Old Days at a New Orleans Soiree
Hey, Engineer is This Train Going South?
Hiawatha Rag (final strain) 
Hindustan (modified by flat 6th chord in bars 27 and 28)
Hotter Than That
I Love You and Don't You Forget It
I'll Take That New Orleans Music
I've Got My Eyes On You
Just Because
Knee Drops 
Louisville Special
March of the Charcoal Greys
March of the Hoodlums (third strain)
Market Street Stomp
Meat on the Table (one theme)
Memphis Stomp
Merci Beaucoup
Mexicali Rose
Milenberg Joys (final strain)
Moonlight and Roses
My Little Girl
Oh How I Miss You Tonight
Over the Waves
Parade of the Pieces
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers
Polka Dot Stomp (first strain, modified)
Pretty Audrey
Saint Bernard Waltz
Salute to Ohio State
Second Line
Slide, Frog, Slide (second strain)
Spanish Eyes (almost all)
Stockyard Strut
Teddy Bears Picnic (one strain)
Tiger Rag ('Hold That Tiger' strain)
Trudy
Under the Double Eagle
Vine Street Drag
Walk Right Back
Washington and Lee Swing (aka Louisiana Swing and aka The Swing and aka Tulane Swing)
Won't You Come Home, Bill Bailey?