Posted on Leave a comment

A Jazz Bass Lick for 2-Bar Major Chords (Chromatic Approach Notes, George Mraz Style)

This article is written by Toru Hoshino, a jazz bassist and instructor based in Japan who teaches online lessons to students worldwide. In this article, he breaks down a slick-sounding lick you can use any time a major chord holds for two bars.

Contents

Who This Article Is For

  • You’re not sure how to build your own improvised solo phrases
  • You want to bring great bassists’ approaches into your own playing
  • You want to expand your vocabulary of solo lines
  • You want to understand how to build jazz phrases around chord tones

Work through the phrase in this article, and you’ll pick up one solid approach for soloing over a major chord that lasts two bars. It transposes easily, so you can apply it to all kinds of tunes — stick with this one to the end.

Where This Comes From

This is a phrase you can use in jazz chord progressions whenever a major chord — like CΔ7 or C7 — holds for two bars. Have a listen to 1:21–1:30 in the video below first.

Album: Manhattan Trinity
Bassist: George Mraz

How the Phrase Is Built

Here’s the approach over a CΔ7 chord:

Diagram showing chromatic approach notes around chord tones over CMaj7

  • ① Play the 3rd (E), drop a half step, then come back to the 3rd (E) — red line
  • ② Play the root (C), drop a half step, then come back to the root (C) — blue line
  • ③ Play the 5th (G), drop a half step, then come back to the 5th (G) — green line
  • ④ Play the 3rd (E) an octave down, drop a half step, then come back to the 3rd (E) — red line

It’s basically weaving through the chord tones. Give it a try with your own hands if you can!

If you played all three of those target notes exactly the same way each time, it wouldn’t be wrong — but it would lose a lot of its style.

Diagram comparing a flatter version of the same phrase

Transposed and Applied

Here’s this same idea — weaving through chord tones using a half-step below each one — transposed and applied elsewhere. This is the chord progression for the jazz standard “Just Friends.”

The same chromatic approach-note idea applied to the chord progression of Just Friends

This works over plenty of tunes, so give it a try in your own playing.

Phrases like this one are easy to get almost right but hard to really nail on your own — exactly the kind of detail a teacher can catch instantly.

Want Personalized Feedback on Your Playing?

This is exactly the kind of thing that’s hard to fix alone — and where having a teacher makes all the difference.

At Line on Bass, I offer an online lesson service where you send me a video of your playing, and I give you specific, detailed feedback — every single day if you want.

Students from around the world are using this to fix exactly these kinds of issues and steadily improve their jazz bass skills.

Check Out the Lesson Service →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *