A bebop minor chords

All ukulele chords for the A bebop minor scale

Show scale diagram ↓
Harmony
Originalii–V–ISec. Dom.

A bebop minor scale diatonic chords

IA unknown
A - C - D
IIC♯ m7
GCEA123
GCEA11116frGCEA22139frGCEA1324
IIID unknown
C - D - F♯
IVC♯ dim
3frGCEA4213
6frGCEA12437frGCEA113410frGCEA2431
VD major
GCEA123
2frGCEA11145frGCEA11327frGCEA1243
VIE minor
GCEA321
GCEA34214frGCEA12347frGCEA1113
VIIF♯ dim
GCEA23
3frGCEA24318frGCEA421311frGCEA1243
VIIIG unknown
G - B - C♯

A bebop minor scale seventh chords

ID 7
GCEA1112
5frGCEA11127frGCEA132410frGCEA2314
IIC♯ m7♭5
GCEA12
GCEA23146frGCEA12349frGCEA1132
IIID 7
GCEA1112
5frGCEA11127frGCEA132410frGCEA2314
IVC♯ m7♭5
GCEA12
GCEA23146frGCEA12349frGCEA1132
VD 7
GCEA1112
5frGCEA11127frGCEA132410frGCEA2314
VIE m6
GCEA12
GCEA23146frGCEA12349frGCEA1132
VIID 7
GCEA1112
5frGCEA11127frGCEA132410frGCEA2314
VIIIC♯ m7♭5
GCEA12
GCEA23146frGCEA12349frGCEA1132

scale

Ukulele fretboard diagram

A bebop minor scale — ukulele fretboard diagramInteractive fretboard diagram showing the A bebop minor scale on ukulele with 15 frets. Notes: A, B, C, C#, D, E, F#, G.ABCC#DEF#GABCEF#GABCC#DEF#GCC#DEF#GABCC#DGABCC#DEF#GA13579111213

A bebop minor scale — ukulele chords and intervals

Harmonizing the A bebop minor scale generates a minor chord family with a chromatic passing chord that maintains rhythmic drive through minor-key changes. The chords of A bebop minor are A unknown, C# minor seventh, D unknown, C# diminished, D major, E minor, F# diminished, G unknown. These chords enable fluid comping over minor seventh passages in jazz. The chromatic chord ensures that the root and fifth always land on downbeats, preserving harmonic clarity during fast tempos. Commonly used in Jazz, Bebop, Hard Bop. Notable players include Wes Montgomery, Joe Henderson, Dexter Gordon.

The A bebop minor scale has the following degrees: 1 2 ♭3 3 4 5 6 ♭7.

Intervals: W-H-H-H-W-W-H-W.

Diatonic chords: A unknown, C# minor seventh, D unknown, C# diminished, D major, E minor, F# diminished, G unknown.

DegreesChord
IA unknown
iiC# minor seventh
iiiD unknown
IVC# diminished
VD major
viE minor
vii°F# diminished
8G unknown

Degree-by-Degree Analysis

The I chord (A unknown) is the tonic — the gravitational center of the key. The ii chord (C# minor seventh) is the minor subdominant, commonly used to approach the V chord. The iii chord (D unknown) functions as a substitute for the I or vi. The IV chord (C# diminished) is the subdominant — it adds motion and moderate tension. The V chord (D major) is the dominant — it creates the strongest tension that wants to resolve to the I. The vi chord (E minor) is the relative minor — it brings emotional color and depth. The vii° chord (F# diminished) is the diminished — the most tense, rarely used alone, usually leading to the I.

This page focuses on the harmonic content — the chords built from each degree of the A bebop minor scale. For fretboard patterns and fingering guides, see the scale page.

Use the interactive harmonizer above to explore triads, seventh chords, and chord voicings for composing with the A bebop minor scale on ukulele.

bebop minor is the Dorian with added chromatic passing tone. View A Dorian scale

Related Scales

How to Use This Scale

Use over m7 chords in jazz. The chromatic addition keeps the phrasing rhythmically clean during fast improvisation.

Explore A bebop minor Further