You Don't Know What Love Is in B

Gene de Paul, Don Raye(1941)balladBallad

You Don't Know What Love Is in B

A deeply melancholic minor-key ballad often played as a slow torch song, a staple of the jazz ballad repertoire favored by Chet Baker and Sonny Rollins.

You Don't Know What Love Is in B

B major mixes barre and open elements. The B chord itself is a barre at fret 2, but E and A are comfortable open chords forming the IV and V. The open B string rings as the root, allowing creative drone-based arrangements. B is a intermediate-level key on guitar because the open B string rings as the root and the open E strings provide the 4th — useful for sus4 voicings and drone effects. This key mixes open and barre shapes, making it a good intermediate challenge that builds fretboard fluency.

Voice Leading

The bass line moves through F to A# (ascending perfect fourth), A# to D# (ascending perfect fourth), D# to G# (ascending perfect fourth), G# to C# (ascending perfect fourth), C# to G (ascending tritone), G to C (ascending perfect fourth), C to D# (ascending minor third), D# to E (ascending half step), E to F (ascending half step), F to A# (ascending perfect fourth), A# to G (descending minor third), G to C (ascending perfect fourth). A half-step bass movement creates a strong leading-tone pull that demands resolution. The root motion by larger intervals (fourths and fifths) gives each chord change a strong, decisive character. When the progression loops, the bass returns from C to F by perfect fourth.

Scales for Improvisation

B major pentatonic works because every note is either a chord tone or a safe passing tone — there are no avoid notes. For soloing, this means you can play freely without clashing. Over dominant seventh chords, B Mixolydian adds the flat seventh for an authentic blues-rock edge.

ballad4/4 · 32 bars · Form: AABA

Chords: Fm, A♯Maj7, D♯7, G♯Maj7, C♯7, Gm7♭5, C7♭9, D♯Maj7, Edim7, Fm7, A♯7, Gm7, C7.