Altered chord


An altered chord is a chord in which one or more notes from the diatonic scale is replaced with a neighboring pitch from the chromatic scale. According to the broadest definition any chord with a nondiatonic chord tone is an altered chord, while the simplest use of altered chords is the use of borrowed chords, chords borrowed from the parallel key, and the most common is the use of secondary dominants. As Alfred Blatter explains,"An altered chord occurs when one of the standard, functional chords is given another quality by the modification of one or more components of the chord."
For example, altered notes may be used as leading tones to emphasize their diatonic neighbors. Contrast this with chord extensions:
In jazz harmony, chromatic alteration is either the addition of notes not in the scale or expansion of a progression by adding extra non-diatonic chords. For example, "A C major scale with an added D note, for instance, is a chromatically altered scale" while, "one bar of Cmaj7 moving to Fmaj7 in the next bar can be chromatically altered by adding the ii and V of Fmaj7 on the second two beats of bar" one. Techniques include the ii-V-I turnaround, as well as movement by half-step or minor third.
The five most common types of altered dominants are: V, V5, V, V5, and V.

Background

"Borrowing" of this type is seen in music from the Renaissance music era and the Baroque music era, such as with the use of the Picardy third, in which a piece in a minor key has a final or intermediate cadence in the tonic major chord. "Borrowing" is also common in 20th century popular music and rock music.
For example, in music in a major key, such as C major, composers and songwriters may use a B major chord, which is "borrowed" from the key of C minor. Similarly, in music in a minor key, composers and songwriters often "borrow" chords from the tonic major. For example, pieces in C minor often use F major and G major, which are "borrowed" from the key of C major.
More advanced types of altered chords were used by Romantic music era composers in the 19th century, such as Chopin, and by jazz composers and improvisers in the 20th and 21st century. For example, the chord progression on the left uses four unaltered chords, while the progression on the right uses an altered IV chord and is an alteration of the previous progression:
The A in the altered chord serves as a leading tone to G, which is the root of the next chord.
According to one definition, "when a chord is chromatically altered, and the thirds remain large or small , and is not used in modulation, it is an altered chord." According to another, "all chords... having a major third, i.e., either triads, sevenths, or ninths, with the fifth chromatically raised or chromatically lowered, are altered chords," while triads with a single altered note are considered, "changes of form ," rather than alteration.
According to composer Percy Goetschius, "Altered... chords contain one or more tones written with accidentals and therefore foreign to the scale in which they appear, but nevertheless, from their connections and their effect, obviously belonging to the principal key of their phrase." Richard Franko Goldman argues that, once one accepts, "the variability of the scale," the concept of altered chords becomes unnecessary: "In reality, there is nothing 'altered' about them; they are entirely natural elements of a single key system," and it is, "not necessary," to use the term as each 'altered chord' is, "simply one of the possibilities regularly existing and employed."
Dan Haerle argues that only fifths and ninths may be altered, as all other alterations may be interpreted as an unaltered chord tone or, enharmonically, as an altered fifth or ninth.

Altered seventh chord

An altered seventh chord is a seventh chord with one, or all, of its factors raised or lowered by a semitone, for example, the augmented seventh chord featuring a raised fifth. The factors most likely to be altered are the fifth, then the ninth, then the thirteenth. All secondary dominants are altered chords. In classical music, the raised fifth is more common than the lowered fifth, which in a dominant chord adds Phrygian flavor through the introduction of.

Altered dominant chord

An altered dominant chord is, "a dominant triad of a 7th chord that contains a raised or lowered fifth and sometimes a lowered 3rd." According to Dan Haerle, "Generally, altered dominants can be divided into three main groups: altered 5th, altered 9th, and altered 5th and 9th." This definition allows three to five options, including the original:
Alfred Music gives nine options for altered dominants, the last four of which contain two alterations each:
Pianist Noah Baerman writes that "The point of having an altered note in a dominant chord is to build more tension."

Alt chord

In jazz, the term altered chord, notated as an alt chord, refers to a dominant chord, in which either the fifth or the ninth is altered—namely, where the 5th and the 9th are raised or lowered by a single semitone, or omitted. Altered chords are thus constructed using the following notes, some of which may be omitted:
  • root
  • 3rd
  • 5th and/or 5th
  • 7th
  • 9th and/or 9th
  • 13th
Altered chords may include both a flattened and sharpened form of the altered fifth or ninth, e.g. G7; however, it is more common to use only one such alteration per tone, e.g. G7, G7, G7, or G7.

In practice, many fake books do not specify all the alterations; the chord is typically just labelled as G7alt, and the alteration of 9ths, 11ths, and 13ths is left to the artistic discretion of the comping musician. The use of chords labeled G7alt can create challenges in jazz ensembles where more than one chordal instrument are playing chords, because the guitarist might interpret a G7alt chord as containing a 9 and 11, whereas the organ player may interpret the same chord as containing a 9 and a 13, resulting in every tone from the altered scale at once, likely a far denser and disonate harmonic cluster than the composer intended. To deal with this issue, bands with more than one chordal instrument may work out the alt chord voicings beforehand or alternate playing of choruses.
The choice of inversion, or the omission of certain tones within the chord, can lead to many different possible colorings, substitutions, and enharmonic equivalents. Altered chords are ambiguous harmonically, and may play a variety of roles, depending on such factors as voicing, modulation, and voice leading.
The altered chord's harmony is built on the altered scale, which includes all the alterations shown in the chord elements above:
  • root
  • 9
  • 9
  • 3
  • 11
  • 13
  • 7
Because they do not have natural fifths, altered dominant chords support tritone substitution. Thus, the 7alt chord on a given root can be substituted with the 1311 chord on the root a tritone away.