Glossary Voicings
Week 32 Updated Mar 01, 2026

Upper Chord Structures

Definition

A voicing approach where the left hand states chord function and the right hand plays a triad above it to control harmonic color and tension independently.

Functional model

Upper chord structures separate a voicing into two independent layers:

  • Function (LH): defines the harmonic role (tonic, predominant, dominant).
  • Color (RH triad): defines tension level and modal identity.

Because these layers are independent, the harmonic function can remain stable while surface color changes. This allows real-time control of cadence energy, phrase intensity, and stylistic character without altering rhythm or density.

Rule of thumb:

  • If the harmony sounds unclear, adjust the left hand.
  • If the harmony is clear but bland, change the right-hand triad.

Shorthand used throughout: Base chord + RH triad

ShorthandResulting chord
Cmaj7 + DCmaj13#11
Dm7 + CDm11
G7 + AbG7alt

In standard notation, upper structures are written as a stacked fraction (triad over chord symbol) to distinguish them from slash chords.

Why musicians use them

Upper structures are a harmonic control system rather than a collection of voicings. They make it possible to:

  • change tension without changing function
  • keep textures compact and playable
  • design phrase-level intensity across a progression
  • modernize comping while preserving clarity

In functional harmony, tonic and predominant chords are typically kept more stable, while dominant chords carry the widest color range.

Core color maps by chord type

All examples assume a C tonal center.

Major (maj7)

RecipeExampleResultCharacter
maj7 + VCmaj7 + GCmaj9Stable, inside tonic color
maj7 + IICmaj7 + DCmaj13#11Bright Lydian, modern and open
maj7 + IIICmaj7 + ECmaj7#5Augmented, unresolved warmth

Minor (m7)

RecipeExampleResultCharacter
m7 + bVIIDm7 + CDm11Warm, stable minor
m7 + IVDm7 + GDm6/9 (Dorian)Bright, modal, forward motion
m7 + bVIDm7 + BbDm(add b6) (Aeolian)Dark, closed, weighty

Switching between + IV and + bVI changes modal color while chord function remains the same.

Dominant (7)

Dominant chords support the widest tension range.

TensionRecipeExampleResultUse
17 + IIG7 + AG13#11Inside, bright, smooth resolution
27 + VIG7 + EG13b9Diminished color, strong pull
37 + bIIIG7 + BbG7#9Blues / gospel tension
47 + bVG7 + DbG7b9#11Symmetrical, tritone-sub color
57 + bVIG7 + EbG7#9b13Rich altered dominant
67 + bIIG7 + AbG7altMaximum cadential tension

As tension increases, the urgency of resolution increases.

Voice-leading and register

  • Keep the RH triad clearly above the LH structure.
  • Choose inversions that produce a singable top line.
  • If the texture becomes muddy, move the RH upward before adding or removing chord tones.
  • Rootless LH shells (3–7) produce the most compact textures in ensemble settings.

Upper structures function best when the top note forms a coherent melodic line across the progression.

Harmonic role and tension design

In functional progressions:

  • Tonic: stable or bright colors
  • Predominant: mostly inside colors
  • Dominant: primary location for altered tension

Reserving the highest-tension structure for the actual cadence point creates clear large-scale phrasing.

Example applications

ii–V–I in C (major)

Inside dominant:

Dm7 + C → G7 + A → Cmaj7 + D

Altered dominant:

Dm7 + C → G7 + Ab → Cmaj7 + D

Only the dominant color changes, but cadence energy increases significantly.

Minor ii–V–i in A minor

Stronger pull:

Bm7b5 + D → E7 + F → Am7 + G

Calmer dominant:

Bm7b5 + D → E7 + F# → Am7 + G

The dominant upper structure determines how urgently the progression resolves.

Static dominant (color shift without function change)

Over G7:

G7 + A → G7 + Bb → G7 + Db → G7 + Ab

The harmonic role remains dominant while tension level increases step by step.

Referenced in