You Are Reading the First 6 FREE Chapters (470 pages)

6.13.2
“I Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’”: How the Chord Progression Works

The Chord Map below (Figure 105) reveals that this song starts with a series of strong second progressions.

Then Gershwin uses the B7 (III7) chord as a pivot chord (because it's common to the keys of G major and E major) to pivot out of the key of G major and into the key of E major.

Then, to get back to the key of G major, he employs a transitory progression, from the variant chord C♯ major, the VI chord (in place of the default chord, C♯ minor, the VIm chord), in the key of E major to the chord D major, whch is the dominant chord of the key of G.

Chord progression Chase chart for the 1935 hit song I Got Plenty O' Nuttin, written by George and Ira Gershwin and DuBose Heyward.

FIGURE 105: Chord Map of “I Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’” (Words by Du Bose Heyward and Ira Gershwin, Music by George Gershwin, 1934)

The E – A – C♯ – D – G progression sounds perfectly palatable to the ear because Gershwin uses chords of the same type—all major triads.

< Previous   Next >