E Minor sixth

Minor sixth (1–♭3–5–6); minor triad with major sixth, Dorian/Aeolian color.

minorm6-6

The minor sixth chord adds a major sixth above the root to a minor triad (1-♭3-5-6). It is a classic color in standards and jazz because the sixth brightens the minor triad while keeping the minor third. It often appears as the first inversion of a major seventh chord a minor third below (same pitch classes), so context and bass motion determine how listeners label it.

Construction

Formula: 1-♭3-5-6. In Cm6, spell C-E♭-G-A.

Usage

Minor tonic colors, i–VI motions, and jazz lines that alternate between m7 and m6 on the same root for melodic variation.

Examples

  • Standards with i6 tonic color
  • Swing-era minor chord voicings
  • Bossa and Latin minor progressions

Play

Watch for voice leading into the sixth; avoid awkward cross-relations with surrounding harmony.

Ear-training cues

Minor triad plus a major sixth above the root—warm, slightly old-school jazz minor.

Which intervals and notes are in the E Minor sixth chord?

Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.

Which scales can you play on the E Minor sixth chord?

Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.

Practice the minor sixth chord

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