Gospel music has some very distinct sounds. You could refer to them as signature sounds as many people can easily distinguish them when they’re heard. In this article, I want to share with you a simple way to add a gospel flavor to any song.
We’ll be using a progression in the key of C Major for our “add gospel flavor” example.
Its helpful to know diatonic harmony to understand the concepts in this article. “Diatonic” simply means in the key of. Harmony is defined as notes that are played in unison for the purpose of producing chords. Each diatonic tone is represented by a number.Gospel music makes use of diatonic harmony just as much as any other style of popular western music. In this article, we’re going to focus on the 1 and 2 chord. As you can see from the Keyshots, the 1 chord is major and the 2 chord is minor.
Using Your Neighbor
The 1 chord is the root chord and the 2 chord is the upper neighbor chord. Using this 1-2 couple is called the upper neighbor chord concept.
The interesting fact about these two chords is that they can harmonize six notes out of seven in a major scale. Notice the “gospely” sound this makes as the 1-2 couple ascends up the key of C Major. Each chord moves through the inversions to accommodate each note in the key.The only tone in the key that this 1-2 couple will not harmonize is the 7th scale degree (B in the key of C Major). The 7th is referred to as the leading tone. It’s so named because it actually leads back to the 1 tone. In this case you could use the 3 chord to harmonize this note. This would be the E minor chord in the key of C Major.Vocal harmony in gospel music is based on this six note scale. You can apply this upper neighbor concept to a static section of music in which the right hand is made up of only the C and D minor chords (in the key of C here).It’s amazing how just two simple chords can add melodic and harmonic interest. In a lead sheet or chord chart, you would likely see this progression labeled with just one chord symbol because it doesn’t lead away from the root chord which in this case is C Major.
Using Your Neighbor’s Neighbor
Another strategy that involves adding harmonic interest to static sections of a song is to borrow the 2 chord from the parallel minor key. Since our gospel example is in the key of C Major, its parallel minor key would be C minor.The 2 chord in the parallel minor key is a diminished triad. The 1 chord is exactly the same as in the previous example. Only the 2 chord is different. Notice how it changes the harmonic character in contrast to the last gospel flavor example.
Going beyond Your Neighbor’s Neighbor
Another “neighbor” option is to use the neighboring chord of the Major key we first just used. This means that we would go back to using chords from the Major key. This would be the 3 chord of the key of C Major. This would be an E minor chord. You can stay within the key if you play the tonic of the chord in the bass (in this case C). This will create a C Major 7th chord. Along the same lines of using parallel keys, you can take the 3 chord and create a dominant 7th chord just by flatting the top note of the minor triad that you just borrowed (lower the B to B flat). You’ll keep the root of the tonic chord in the bass just as you did before. This E minor 7 chord really makes the chord progression sound more bluesy.
You can go even further with the concept by flatting the 3rd along with the 7th scale degree. This will create an E flat Major triad. When combined with the C in the bass, creates a C minor 7 chord. Although you’re altering the 3rd by lowering it a half step, it stays within our gospel flavor concept.
Combining Upper Neighbors
We can use the dual concept of using both upper neighbor chords by creating a diminished chord out of the 2 and 3 chord. This allows you to utilize the dominant 7th as it’s defined by playing the tonic (C) in the left hand……and combine it with the diminished 2 chord also over the tonic note that adds an interesting gospel texture. You would also invert these chords as you would in the preceding chords shown earlier.
As I stated earlier in this article about adding a gospel flavor to any song in two easy steps, make sure that you have an understanding of diatonic harmony as well as chord inversions. This article moved slightly beyond the simple steps but I just wanted to expand upon it to show you there are more possibilities. Even though we’re just scratching the surface of gospel harmony, you’ll find it doesn’t take a whole lot of knowledge to add a gospel flavor.
Until next time, Go Play!
Greg Lee
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