I was watching the Cassandrea O'neal DVD and she used the following chord as a passing chord to the 3 (G minor) in key of Eb:
AbF/BEbG
I can't classify this chord for the life of me.. it sounds like its some kind of diminished chord..
The whole move was this..
AbF/BEbG,Ab
GF/BbDFBb
so would you call this chord an Ab dim M7 (#5)???
What about an Fm9(b5) in 1st inversion?
The whole point of the move is to resolve to the G minor or the 3...
so far I got that she was either doing a
Ab dim resolve to G minor
or Db7(b5) resolve to G minor
You can see it as Fm9b5/Ab. A jazz player that could not reach it would leave the Ab out.
if you didnt get a chance to watch the video, please do; the link is my previous post. listen to what she does with the g in the right hand right before she goes to g minor. it resolves upwards, which leads me to the conclusion that the g is a retardation to the Ab. the chord is spelled: AbF/BEb(G~>Ab). rearrange that into thirds, and u get F Ab B Eb. no G because the G resolved upwards.
that spells Fmin9b5.
Alrighty then, I have seen the video and read through all the responses. I highlighted a few of them I believe are great responses. From what I can tell, there seems to be an argument/discussion of whether the root is Ab or F.
I am going to respell the chord then explain what I think it is: Ab-F / Cb-Eb-G, Ab
Part 1:
I believe that the root is indeed Ab and I call this an Abm6 chord. Like reality check explained, the G is not really a part of the chord. It is a non-harmonic tone called an appogitura. So, when u take away the G, you are left with Ab-Cb-Eb-F, thus an Abm6 chord.
It is also be an Fm7 (b5), if I believed that the root was indeed the missing F on the bottom.
Part 2:
I see a tritone in there - F, B.
I would call it either a Db7(b5) or a G7(#5,b9). The only thing that's missing is a root to define which on it is. I would go with Db7(b5).
It's like a twisted, stretched tritone substitution on the Gm7 (a true tritone substitution would be for a G7).
When I first heard this chord, I recognized the sound from another song "I Need You Now" Smokie Norful. When Smokie went into the chorus "I need You nooooowwww....", on the 4th time he sung it, he played a series of 2 chords get to 5. The first chord was a major chord built on b7, then he went to a dom 7 (b5) chord built on the b6. So, it went like this:
Key Ab LH/RH
Gb / Db-Gb-Bb (b7)
Fb / Ab-D-Gb-Bb (b6)
Eb (5) *this chord isn't important to the discussion, LOL
I'm going to change the key F and show it:
Eb / Bb-Eb-G
Db / Cb-Eb-G
Now, that last chord should look familiar, well the RH part of it. It's the same chord used in this discussion, but here the root is Db. So, I see exactly why darkwing said the missing root could be Db cuz this is immediately where my mind went when I 1st heard and played it. Unfortunately, since the G is not part of the chord, this can't be a possiblity.