It Could Happen To You in Mi
It Could Happen To You in Mi
Van Heusen's swinging standard moves through clean harmonic progressions that support Bebop Major fluency on the tonic, Dorian phrasing on the ii chords, and Mixolydian color on the dominant sevenths. The medium-swing feel and logical harmonic movement make it a reliable vehicle for bebop melodic development. A tune where rhythmic confidence and melodic invention can shine without harmonic obstacles.
It Could Happen To You in Mi
E major is arguably guitar's most powerful key. The open low E and high E strings ring sympathetically as the root, while the open B provides the fifth. This triple reinforcement gives E-based riffs and chords unmatched depth and volume. E is a beginner-level key on guitar because both the low E and high E strings ring as the root, and the open B is the fifth — three open strings reinforce the tonic chord. Beginners will find this key approachable since most chords use open voicings with minimal stretching.
Voice Leading
The bass line moves through E to E (ascending unison), E to B (descending perfect fourth), B to D (ascending minor third), D to C# (descending half step), C# to F# (ascending perfect fourth), F# to F# (ascending unison), F# to B (ascending perfect fourth), B to A# (descending half step), A# to D# (ascending perfect fourth), D# to G# (ascending perfect fourth), G# to C# (ascending perfect fourth). A half-step bass movement creates a strong leading-tone pull that demands resolution. The root motion by larger intervals (fourths and fifths) gives each chord change a strong, decisive character. When the progression loops, the bass returns from C# to E by minor third.
Scales for Improvisation
E major pentatonic works because every note is either a chord tone or a safe passing tone — there are no avoid notes. For soloing, this means you can play freely without clashing. Over dominant seventh chords, E Mixolydian adds the flat seventh for an authentic blues-rock edge.