The Blues for Alice changes, Bird changes, Bird Blues, or New York Blues changes, is a chord progression, often named after Charlie Parker ("Bird"), which is a variation of the twelve-bar blues.
The progression uses a series of sequential ii–V or secondary ii–V progressions, and has been used in pieces such as Parker's "Blues for Alice". Toots Thielemans's "Bluesette",[1] Freight Trane written by pianist Tommy Flanagan, and Parker's "Confirmation"[2] also have similar progressions.
Structure
A simple blues progression, in C, is as follows:
A typical blues progression in jazz, in C, is as follows:[3]
The Bird Blues progression, in C, is as follows:[4]
This can be viewed as a cycle of ii–V progressions leading to the IV chord (F7 in the key of C major), and the tritone substitution of the dominant chords leading by half-step to the V chord (G7 in C).[4]
C:
Am:
G(m):
F:
IM7
iiø7 V7
ii7 V7
ii7 V7
F:
E♭:
D:
D♭(m):
I7
subii7subV7
subii7subV7
subii7subV7
C:
ii7
V7
IM7 VI7
ii7 V7
Sources
^Hatfield, Ken (2005). Jazz and the Classical Guitar Theory and Applications, p.182. ISBN0-7866-7236-6.
^Umble, Jay (2011). Mbgu Jazz Curriculum: Payin Your Dues with the Blues, p. 62. ISBN9781610653145.