Nica's Dream in D

Horace Silver(1956)latinMedium Latin/Swing
Do Re MiC D E
A
A
B
A

Chord Diagrams — Nica's Dream in D (Guitar)

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Nica's Dream in D

Horace Silver's Latin minor classic oscillates between Dorian grooves on the tonic minor and Lydian brightness on the unexpected major chords, with Harmonic Minor colouring the dominant resolutions. The montuno-style vamp sets up a relentless rhythmic intensity that demands melodic clarity even at high tempos. A hard bop staple that never loses its Afro-Cuban heat.

Nica's Dream in D

D major is one of guitar's most resonant keys. The open D string acts as a droning root, and the open A string provides the fifth. This gives D-based strumming a wide, ringing quality that flatpicks and fingerpicks love. D is a beginner-level key on guitar because the open D and A strings provide a powerful bass foundation, and the open high E is the 2nd scale degree adding brightness. Beginners will find this key approachable since most chords use open voicings with minimal stretching.

Voice Leading

The bass line moves through C# to A (descending major third), A to G# (descending half step), G# to G (descending half step), G to F# (descending half step), F# to B (ascending perfect fourth), B to E (ascending perfect fourth), E to F (ascending half step), F to A# (ascending perfect fourth), A# to D# (ascending perfect fourth), D# to D# (ascending unison), D# to G# (ascending perfect fourth), G# to C# (ascending perfect fourth), C# to D# (ascending whole step), D# to G# (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 G# to C# by perfect fourth.

Scales for Improvisation

D 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, D Mixolydian adds the flat seventh for an authentic blues-rock edge.