Jerry Bergonzi Inside Improvisation Vol. 7: Hexatonics
Read Bergonzi Vol. 7 as a focused practice system for six-note collections, triad pairs, modern upper-structure color, and symmetric melodic organization.
Published Jun 13, 2026, 9:00 AM
Read Bergonzi Vol. 7 as a focused practice system for six-note collections, triad pairs, modern upper-structure color, and symmetric melodic organization.
Inside Improvisation Series, Vol. 7: Hexatonics belongs in a major music bookshelf because it changes how a practicing musician names problems. This JolyBook note reads the book as a working source: what it asks the ear to notice, what it gives the hand to practice, and where the idea needs careful interpretation.

Why this book matters
Inside Improvisation Series, Vol. 7: Hexatonics belongs in the JolyBook shelf because it isolates one improvisational problem and gives the player a repeatable way to work on it. Bergonzi does not treat vocabulary as decoration. The material is meant to become a behavior: something the ear recognizes, the body can execute, and the player can vary under musical pressure.
The central focus of this volume is six-note collections, triad pairs, modern upper-structure color, and symmetric melodic organization. That focus is narrow in the best sense. A musician can practice one device deeply enough to hear where it works, where it becomes mechanical, and how it can be transformed into phrase material.
The larger lesson across the Inside Improvisation series is disciplined limitation. Instead of trying to learn every possible jazz idea at once, each volume gives the player a smaller laboratory. The player studies a device, moves it through keys and progressions, then tests whether it can survive inside repertoire without sounding pasted on.
How to practice the idea
Build a six-note set from two triads, write all alternating triad-pair lines, then resolve each line into the target chord.
- Choose one hexatonic collection exercise and sing it without the instrument.
- Play it in four keys at a tempo slow enough to control articulation and time feel.
- Write the same idea over ii-V-I, minor ii-V-i, and a static modal vamp.
- Create three variations: one rhythmic, one intervallic, and one register-based.
- Improvise a chorus using the idea only twice, then leave space so the line sounds chosen rather than automatic.
Analysis frame
| Focus | What to hear | Practice decision |
|---|---|---|
| Six-note set | A hexatonic collection has enough color but avoids full-scale blur. | Name both source triads and shared function. |
| Triad pair | Two triads create intervallic clarity. | Alternate triads before mixing order freely. |
| Superimposition | The set can imply upper extensions over a root. | Test the collection over major, minor, and dominant sounds. |
| Resolution | Modern color needs harmonic aim. | Resolve to thirds, sevenths, or melody target notes. |
Core takeaways
| Reading focus | Practical takeaway |
|---|---|
| Hexatonic color | Six notes can sound more focused than a seven-note scale. |
| Triad pairs | Two simple structures can create sophisticated lines. |
| Modern harmony | Upper structures become melodic material. |
| Resolution | Color is strongest when it knows where to land. |
Interactive examples
Reading caution
Bergonzi practice becomes shallow when the device is played as a pattern dump. Every exercise has to return to time feel, phrase shape, harmonic aim, and personal sound.