Memorization is much easier once you start to recognize certain chord patterns that occur over and over again in jazz - you'll be able to memorize phrases and sentences instead of letters and words, if you will. This will get you going in that direction, with the example of Miles Davis' jam classic, Solar, as an illustration.
Here are the chords to Solar (every major chord below should be understood as a Major 7th):
| Cm | Cm | Gm | C7 |
| F | F | Fm | Bb7 |
| Eb | Ebm - Ab7 | Db | Dm7b5 - G7+ |
This is a key ingredient to memorization. You emphatically don't have to memorize all the nitpicky little extensions (such as 9, 13b5, 11, etc.) that you sometimes see in jazz charts. Once in a while, a chord alteration is critical to the feel of a chord, but often the alteration is only introduced into the chordal notation in order to accomodate the melody note. Great guitarists such as Joe Pass and Jimmy Bruno can be found on their (excellent) instructional DVDs saying things like: "there are only 3 main types of chords: major (or major 7th), minor (or minor seventh), and dominant seventh chords. Don't take chord symbols that literally - when you see a dominant 7th chord, play an alteration: a 9th, 13th, or whatever seems right."
I think this advice is generally right, with a few caveats:
Let's start establishing a pattern dictionary - there are a handful of chordal patterns that show up in jazz again and again.
First, there are several mini-patterns for chord changes - suppose you're playing a chord, and you don't know what the next one should be. Now, if you're going to take a WAG (wild-ass guess) at the next chord in a jam, it might be a good idea to keep it at a pretty low volume until you know whether you're right or not. However, let's talk about the relative frequency of "binary" (two-chord) mini-patterns.
This is just a start on patterns. Please add your own in the comments if you have some.
There are only two easy things you need to remember in order to memorize all 12 chord changes in Solar, in any key!
You shouldn't need to explicitly memorize the fact that, at the end of the form, the Db goes to a Dm7b5, because the turnaround to the tonic is almost always present in jazz tunes, and the fact that pattern 2 is used here is almost required, since the tune is in a minor key.
Well, what do you think? Are these principles helpful? Can you analyze and learn other tunes successfully with it? Can you play the Solar chords from memory? Can you play it in Ebm without writing down the chords?
- Warren
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Disclaimer The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.