Voicing Box II · m2 + M3 + M2
The same pitch set as Box I, voiced from the second-lowest note. The intervals roll: half step on the bottom, third in the middle, whole step on top. Useful when you want the same chord qualities but a different colour.
Voicing Boxes Series
Box II is a four-note rootless shape. Its interval signature from the bottom up is m2 + M3 + M2 (1 + 4 + 2 semitones). The shape itself doesn't change — only the chord you imagine underneath does. That's how a single fingering can voice 6 distinct chord qualities.
Each cell of Box II maps to these six qualities:
Voicing
E – F – A – B
Stack from low to high — m2 + M3 + M2
Six chord interpretations of this shape
| Cell | Voicing | m7 | 7sus | 7♯9 | Δ♯5 | m7♭5 | 6/9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | E–F–A–B | Dm7 | G7sus | D♯7♯9 | AΔ♯5 | Em7♭5 | F6/9 |
| 2 | A♭–A–D–E♭ | G♭m7 | C♭7sus | G7♯9 | D♭Δ♯5 | A♭m7♭5 | A6/9 |
| 3 | C–D♭–F–G | B♭m7 | E♭7sus | B7♯9 | F♯Δ♯5 | Cm7♭5 | D♭6/9 |
| 4 | F–G♭–B♭–C | E♭m7 | A♭7sus | E7♯9 | BΔ♯5 | Fm7♭5 | G♭6/9 |
| 5 | B♭–B–E♭–F | A♭m7 | D♭7sus | A7♯9 | EΔ♯5 | B♭m7♭5 | B6/9 |
| 6 | D–E♭–G–A | Cm7 | F7sus | C♯7♯9 | GΔ♯5 | Dm7♭5 | E♭6/9 |
Two reasons. First, in a band the bass player has the root covered. Second, leaving out the root makes the upper structure shape work for many chords at once — that is the whole point of the system.
The pitch-class set is fixed. The exact octave you place each note in is up to you and the voice-leading context. Most pianists keep the shape inside one octave to start, then spread it once it's under their fingers.
Box I, II, III, and IV are four rotations of the same pitch-class set. Choose the one whose lowest note voice-leads best from your previous chord. Box V is a separate shape used for ♯11, alt, sus♭9 and minor-major colours.
Pull up the Chord Finder for any chord in the tables above and you'll see the shape on the keyboard. Drill the cells against a click on the Chord Drill.
Voicing Boxes Series