4 Levels of 2 5 1 6 Jazz Guitar Chords
What’s the 2 5 1 6 Progression
The 2–5–1–6 progression (often written ii–V–I–vi) is a very common chord sequence in jazz and many other styles.
It’s built from the degrees of a major scale:
2 (ii) → minor 7 chord
5 (V) → dominant 7 chord
1 (I) → major 7 chord
6 (vi) → minor 7 chord
Example in C Major:
C major scale:
C – D – E – F – G – A – B
The chords become:
Dm7 (ii)
G7 (V)
Cmaj7 (I)
Am7 (vi)
So the progression is:
Dm7 – G7 – Cmaj7 – Am7
This will serve as the basis for the 4 exercises below.
Why It’s Important in Jazz
✔︎ The ii–V–I is the most important progression in jazz.
✔︎ Adding the vi chord creates a smooth cycle and often sets up another ii–V.
✔︎ It appears in countless standards (Autumn Leaves, Rhythm Changes variations, etc.).
✔︎ It’s essential for comping, chord melody, and improvisation.
Harmonic Tricks Used
Diminished 7 Substitution For Dominant 7 Chord
A diminished 7 substitution for a dominant 7 chord means you can replace a dominant 7 chord with a diminished 7 chord built from its 3rd, 5th, 7th, or ♭9 — because they share almost the same notes.
In the exercises below, G7 is replaced by Bdim built on its third.
Because of the symmetry of the diminished 7 chord you can also play Ddim7, Fdim7 and A♭dim7.
Chord Equivalence (min7 and 6)
A major 6 chord is the same notes as the minor 7 chord built on its 6th degree.
Example pattern:
C6 ↔ Am7
F6 ↔ Dm7
G6 ↔ Em7
Different function, same notes, different tonal center.
Diminished 7 Symmetry
A diminished 7 chord is symmetrical because it is built entirely from minor thirds.
Example:
B°7 = B – D – F – A♭
Each note is 3 semitones apart.
Because of this:
✔︎ Any note in the chord can act as the root
✔︎ There are only 3 unique diminished 7 chords in total
✔︎ Inverting the chord gives the same notes
So:
B°7 = D°7 = F°7 = A♭°7
Same notes, different starting point.
That’s what we mean by symmetry.
