Today’s lesson is all about chord substitutions. A chord substitution is when you place a chord in a piece with another. Changing the chord progression in a piece is also known as reharmonization. Substitutions can either be diatonic (in the key) or non-diatonic. The basics behind substitutions involve replacing one chord with another that shares two common tones. Whether you want to get into songwriting, or you just want to learn more music theory, knowing chord subs is essential. Three of the subs we will discuss are supertonic to dominant (ii-V); sub-dominant to leading tone(IV-vii0), sub-mediant in place of tonic, and tritone subs.
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An Introduction to Chord Substitutions on Piano
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chord substitutionschordsubstitutionsprogressionchordstutoriallessoncreatecreatingchromatictritoneii-Vdiminisheddominantjazzharmonyjazz harmonyharmonicadvancedbeginnersreharmonizationpianokeyboardlessonsplayplayinglearnmusicswappingtonesnotestheorysongwritingtonicsecondary dominantsseventhbluesworknon-diatonicdiatonicfunctionalcommonharmonization