Lydian chord

Lydian chord on C  Play .

In jazz music, the lydian chord is the major 711 chord,[1] or 11 chord, the chord built on the first degree of the lydian mode, the sharp eleventh being a compound augmented fourth. It is described as "beautiful" and "modern sounding."[1]

The notes that make up the Lydian chord represent 5 of the 7 notes of the Lydian mode, and the 11 at the top of the chord is the 4 (one octave higher) that distinguishes the Lydian mode from the major scale.

F Lydian Chord and Lydian Mode

Major 711 may also refer to the Lydian augmented chord, an augmented seventh chord with augmented fourth appearing in the Lydian augmented scale  Play .[2]

In a chord chart the notation, "Lydian" indicates a major family chord with an added augmented eleventh, including maj711, add911, and 611.[1]

Harmonic function

Lydian chords may function as subdominants or substitutes for the tonic in major keys.[3]

Lydian chord: CM1311  Play .

Lydian (CΔ11):

r, 3, 5, 7, (9), 11, (13)
  • The Lydian chord has a peculiarity, in that placing the root both above and below the augmented eleventh creates an unpleasant dissonance of a tritone.
  • The interval of the sixth is used even though it is described after other compound intervals, and perhaps should also be a compound interval (i.e., thirteenth). The interval is considered to be the compound interval(i.e., thirteenth) when appearing with the Maj7th in the initial chord.
Thirteenth chord: C1311  Play .[4]

The dominant 711 or Lydian dominant (C711) comprises the notes:

r, 3, (5), 7, (9), 11, (13)

Basing this chord on the pitch C results in the pitches:

C, E, G, B, (D), F, (A)

The same chord type may also be voiced:

C, E, B, F, A, D, F

This voicing omits the perfect fifth (G) and raises the major ninth (D) by an octave. The augmented eleventh (F) is also played twice in two different registers. This is known as "doubling".

Sources

  1. 1 2 3 Juergensen, Chris (2006). The Infinite Guitar, p.50. ISBN 1-4116-9007-9.
  2. Munro, Doug (2002). Jazz Guitar: Bebop and Beyond, p.39. ISBN 978-0-7579-8281-1.
  3. Miller, Scott (2002). Mel Bay Getting Into Jazz Fusion Guitar, p.44. ISBN 0-7866-6248-4.
  4. Benward & Saker (2009). Music in Theory and Practice: Volume II, p.185. Eighth Edition. ISBN 978-0-07-310188-0.
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