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I was watching a video of SRV and one of the things that really stood out was the fact that he seemed to have a different iteration of the I-IV-V turnaround - and made it look/sound effortless. Any starting points/suggestions for substitutions for a I-IV-V turnaround?

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    Try building I-IV-V from different modes. i-iv-V (melodic minor (use IV "on the way up")); I-iv-V (I forget, Locrian? whatever it is it's creepy); I-IV-v (Lydian), etc. Commented Oct 16, 2011 at 6:06

4 Answers 4

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There are a ton of easy and great-sounding substitutions, and you can use them in the turnaround or anywhere else you want. Here are a few of the most common:

  • ii-V sub: Substitute ii for IV, so that you have a ii-V turnaround. For example, if you're playing in the key of C, the V chord is G7 and the ii chord is Dm7. So instead of C-F-G7, play C-Dm7-G7. This is far and away the easiest and most common substitution, and in fact it's the standard turnaround in jazz.
  • Secondary Dominants: Use secondary dominants, i.e. V chords of V chords. Again, if you're playing in the key of C, the V chord is G7 and the V of G is D7, so instead of playing C-F-G7, play C-D7-G7 instead. You can extend this as much as you want, i.e. use V chords of V chords of V chords, etc. Entire songs have been written around this idea ("Salty Dog" comes to mind).
  • Tritone Subs: In general, you can make what's called a "tritone substitution" on any dominant chord (i.e. any 7th chord). It works like this: if the root of the V chord is X, replace the chord with a 7th chord whose root is a tritone away from X. So in the key of C, again the V chord is a G7. The note that's a tritone away from G is D♭, so replace the G7 with a D♭7. Combined with the ii-for-IV substitution, the turnaround goes from C-F-G to C-Dm7-D♭7, which has some really nice voice-leading in the bass notes. Combine tritone subs with secondary dominants and you can have a field day with different patterns and substitutions.
  • Diminished Subs: Every diminished chord is a 7th chord with a flatted 9 in four different ways. For example, the diminished chord with the notes D♭-E-G-B♭ is, simultaneously, a C7-9, an E♭7-9, an F♯7-9, and an A7-9. This offers a dizzying array of substitutional opportunities, and it also means that diminished scales and arpeggios sound great over 7th chords.
  • Median Subs: Another general substitution is called a "median substitution". For this, you replace a chord whose root note is X with a chord whose root note is a third above or a third below X. You want to stay within the diatonic harmony of the key you're playing in, so the new chord may not be the same type of chord as the original. For example, if you're playing in the key of C, you can replace the I chord (C Major) with a iii chord (Em7) or a vi chord (Am7), because iii is a third above I and vi is a third below I. In fact, the ii-for-IV substitution I mentioned first is just a median sub (ii being a third below IV).

Some of these substitutions sound better in a jazz context than a pure blues context, but either way they'll spice up your playing. Also, the same principles apply to your soloing: for example, if you're soloing over a G7, feel free to play a D♭ pentatonic or mixolydian scale, which will still sound good but add a bit of unexpected color.

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    Wow! Solid and thorough answer!
    – Jimi Oke
    Commented Jan 23, 2011 at 3:40
  • Should this question have the chords tag?
    – Bella
    Commented Jan 23, 2011 at 16:22
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    I'm with @luserdroog. The description I got of tritone subs is to just replace the bass tone with one a tritone apart. For example, instead of playing G13 (G-F-A-B-E), play Dbalt by just changing the bass (Db-F-A-B-E). The good thing about that is that the bassist can do that, and the chord player does not even need to be aware of it.
    – Gauthier
    Commented Mar 29, 2012 at 1:08
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    Since I cannot yet comment on Alex's fine answer, I will simply observe that Norman McAndrew says the exact same thing -- verbatim -- on page four of his chord substitution guide (which I discovered while attempting to research "median subs" further).
    – Kirk A
    Commented Apr 7, 2014 at 0:50
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    Holy moley! He totally plagiarized my answer! I'm honestly not sure how I feel about that, actually. I mean, it's not like I get paid for my contributions here or anything, but a little attribution would have nice. Oh well—I hope you found it helpful, anyway. Commented Apr 7, 2014 at 2:00
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Here are quite a few standard substitutions take from page 36 of the free PDF you can download here:

http://www.jazzbooks.com/mm5/download/FQBK-handbook.pdf

http://img51.imageshack.us/img51/9408/blueschanges.jpg

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In jazz-blues I often play:

  • | I7 VI7 | ii V7 | (and extensions) - in key of F it would be: | F7 D7 | Gm C7 |
  • | I7 I#dim| ii Vaug| in key of F it would be: | F7 F#dim | Gm Caug |

There is also cliche lick with chromatically descending sixths.

I have article on my blog about blues turnarounds. You can check it there (Blues Turnarounds)

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If you're looking for something maybe a little different, Gillian Welch's version of Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor has a pattern I really like:

The I/first bar is treated like a pick-up measure, and the melody starts on the IV and goes 11 bars. The progression is:

I
IV I IV V
I III IV
I V I V

Although the turnaround is very straightforward, the I III IV preceding it lends an enhanced sense of resolution.

I don't know much theory, so I may be wildly incorrect as to how this song may be properly marked up (I'm especially wondering whether what I'm calling a III is something else), but I hope if nothing else it's food for thought.

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  • Haven't heard that song, but it may start "V - I" instead of "I - IV". If the second chord sounds more primary, then it probably is. Commented Oct 16, 2011 at 5:37