Jul 4, 2020

The "Groovin' High" family of II V's


In a number of classic bebop melodies, and in classic recorded solos as well, you'll hear examples of what I'll call the "Groovin' High" family of II V licks. The common feature of these licks is the use of a chromatic line from the root of the II chord, descending by half steps, to the third of the V chord. 

Here's an example from Dizzy Gillespie's 1945 composition "Groovin' High" (transposed here to the key of C). This II V phrase incorporates and embellishes the chromatic line D, C#, C, B, as indicated by the arrows:




Here's another example from the head to Charlie Parker's "Billie's Bounce," also from 1945 (transposed to C). Again, note the line D, C#, C, B:




Another well-known tune that uses this line is Sonny Rollins' 1956 blues "Tenor Madness" (transposed to C):



To understand where this chromatic line comes from, consider the example below. The "active ingredient" in any II V is the motion of the seventh of the II chord (C) dropping to become the third of the V chord (B). No other notes need to change when changing chords. The notes D and F are common to both Dm7 and G7, and the note A can stay, to become the ninth of the G7.


basic voice leading for II V in C


In the G7, B is the most important note, as it is the leading tone that is providing tension, trying to resolve up a half step to the root of the I chord (C, C6, Cmaj7, etc.) that normally would follow.

The example below shows an elaboration of this voice leading, adding a chromatic line starting on D. The line implies the chords shown here, though the melodic line does not really need to have the support of these exact chords.


with descending passing tones added



This voice-leading line can be further elaborated to create II V patterns like the ones below. Chords might be shown (or played) as in the example above, or as in the first example below, but more often are just squared off to one per measure, as in the other two examples:







Charlie Parker was unquestionably aware of this II V device. Below are some excerpts from melodies and solos in the Charlie Parker Omnibook, Vol. 1 (Eb edition). Coincidentally, these are all in the key of G:


from "Confirmation" head (the D7 notes use a
#9 b9 (F and Eb) rather than a normal third (F#)




from "Anthropology" head (I'd have shown the first measure as Am7)



from "Anthropology" solo (likewise)



from "Bloomdido" solo (Charlie is displacing the implied harmony a bit)




from "Blues (Fast)"



I chose to call this device the "Groovin' High" family of II V's because that tune and "Billie's Bounce" are the earliest jazz examples I could find, both from 1945. I have no doubt that jazz pianists had figured this out earlier, and I'm sure that plenty of similar melodic and harmonic examples can be found in the classical repertoire. One possible earlier jazz use could be Thelonious Monk's "Round Midnight," in the chord changes at the beginning of the A section. Monk may have written this tune in the 1930s. But there's no way of knowing if he was harmonizing it the same way then as he did in later recordings. 

If any readers know of earlier examples in the jazz repertoire, or in Great American Songbook tunes of the 20s -30s, please leave a comment!


(Erratum: In the example labelled “with descending passing tones added,” the first chord symbol should of course be Dm, not D)


4 comments:

Barry Reitman said...

Are the examples accurate? The discussions leading to the first two don't match.

Peter Spitzer said...

Barry - Would it have made more sense if the harmony in the first 2 examples had been shown as Dm Dm#7 Dm7 G7? Although that’s what the (buried and embellished) chromatic line implies, these tunes are generally shown/played with a simple II and V. The melodic line has its own logic, but works fine against the simpler Dm7 G7. Or am I misunderstanding your comment?

Barry Reitman said...

Thank you. It's probably me.

The second paragraph says "Here's an example from Dizzy Gillespie's 1945 composition "Groovin' High" (transposed here to the key of C). This II V phrase incorporates the chromatic line D, C#, C, B:"

But it's followed by a 3-measure melodic line that does not contain "the chromatic line D, C#, C, B."

Peter Spitzer said...

Barry - Thanks. You are probably not the only reader who has wondered about that. I should have been more clear in my explanation.

I was trying to say that the chromatic line is incorporated into the licks, not that the notes occur sequentially, like a piece of a chromatic scale. I have gone back and changed the first three examples, adding arrows showing the chromatic line. Hopefully that will help clarify the discussion. Thanks for your input!