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Quartal Chord Voicings

Quartal Harmony

We have already briefly discussed Quartal Harmony in the lesson on the So What Chord. We established that, while chords are traditionally constructed in intervals of 3rds, it is also possible to build chord up in intervals of 4ths. These are called Quartal Chord Voicings.

A few points on Quartal chords:

Chord Ambiguity

Because of the way the Quartal Chords are constructed (4ths rather than 3rds), they are rather ambiguous and can be numerous chords at once, depending on the context. Some of these chords are listed below.

ChordEADGC
C6936951
FMaj13731395
Am115111♭7♭3
D9sus95147
B♭Maj13#11#1173139

Quartal Chord Inversions

It’s interesting to note that a 1st inversion Quartal Chord is a So What Chord.

QuartalSo WhatSheet Music
E-A D-G-CA-D G-C-E

Generic Quartal Chord Voicings

While a Quartal Chord can be a number of different chords, as outlined above, there are, nevertheless, Generic Quartal Chord Voicings which are widely used for particular chord types. These are shown below.

NotesChord
E-A D-G-CC69
B-E A-D-GCMaj9
A-D G-C-FDm11
B-F A-D-GG9
F-B E-A-DG13

Using the above Generic Voicings, it is possible to play a Quartal II-V-I

II-V-I in C
Basic Chord ProgressionDm7G7CMaj7
Variation #1Dm11G9CMaj9
A-D G-C-FB-F A-D-GB-E A-D-G
Variation #2Dm11G13C69
A-D G-C-FF-B E-A-DE-A D-G-C

Note: The interval B to F is an augmented 4th (tritone) and the interval F to A is a diminished 4th (Major 3rd).

In the same way that we can build regular tertian diatonic chords by walking up a scale (Cmaj7, Dm7, Em7, etc.) we can also do this with quartal diatonic chords.

If you’re using only the notes from a particular key, a Quartal Voicing can be any diatonic chord from that key, as long as it does NOT contain that chord’s Avoid Note. And you get a harmonically stronger chord if the voicing includes the Guide Tones (3rd & 7th) of that chord. Below is a graph demonstrating this.

NotesMissing NotesAllowable ChordsAvoid Notes
EADGCF & BC69
Dm11
Am11
FMaj13
Cmaj7 – F
Dm7 – None
Em7 – F and C
Fmaj7 – None
G7 – C
G7sus - None
Am7 – F
Bø7 – C
FBEADG & CG13
Bø7
Dm69
FMaj7#11
GCFBEA & DG7sus
FMaj7#11
ADGCFB & EDm11
F69
BEADGC & FCMaj13
Em11
Bø7
FMaj13#11
CFBEAD & GG7sus
FMaj7#11
DGCFBE & AG7sus
FMaj#11

A similar exercise can be performed for 4 & 6 note Quartal chords.

One widely used 6 note Quartal Chord is the below Dominant Chord. This is a particularly good chord to use over a Blues.

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