A chord built on this scale degree is replaced by a chord built two scale degrees higher in the first chord of Jerry Coker’s Backdoor progression. A seventh chord built on this scale degree follows a tonic major seventh chord in the opening of “The Girl From Ipanema (“ee-pa-NAY-ma”).” Seventh chords built on this scale degree are the third played in both the original A and B section of the Rhythm changes and second-to-last in the Montgomery-Ward bridge. An iconic jazz progression used in “Honeysuckle Rose” places the minor chord built on this scale degree before an authentic cadence; that is the this number, five, one progression. The piano answers the bass with a phrase of this many chords in the opening riff of Miles Davis’s “So What.” For 10 points, a signature tune of Art Tatum is titled “tea for” how many people? ■END■
ANSWER: two [or supertonic; accept “Tea for Two”; accept two chord or two seventh chord; accept ii–V–I progression after “five, one” is read]
<Other Fine Arts>
= Average correct buzz position