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Now we're going to go through and show you how to get altered voicings in E flat major.
So if we go through, again remember we numbered it one, three, five, seven, nine, eleven,
thirteen, so we have one, three, five, seven, nine, eleven, and thirteen. So, say you have
an E flat major sharp nine, so we go one, three, five, seven, nine, there it is, right.
And I just sharp it, it's that easy. So now, I have a new scale right. There's your E major
sharp nine. So you hear how different it sounds from a major chord harmony. Or say you have
a D, or E flat major sharp eleven. One, three, five, seven, nine, eleven. There's my eleven,
sharp it, and I got this scale. See how nice that sharp eleven sounds? And there's a lot
of standards that voice that nine-eleven, or the sharp eleven in the melody. It's a
very lush chord. So by going through and finding the appropriate note that needs to be altering
it, and altering it, and then playing that new scale, we can go through and find different
voicings for a whole arrangement of all different chords and chords out of this one major scale.