Peri´s
Scope/Montreux II/Bill Evans/Jazz/1970
1. Use the root third and seventh under the melody;
2. Omit the fifth of the chord;
3. For added, optional color, add a ninth, eleventh, or thirteenth
Observe in all of the examples that the root is always the bass note and above the root you place the third, seventh, and melody. The voice leading alternates—EX. 1: R (root), 3rd, 7th leading to R, 7th, l0th in measures 1 and 2; or R, l0th, 7th leading to R, 7th, l0th in measure 3— depending upon the root movement. In this tune the root movement is mostly down a fifth (or up a fourth, i.e. II-V, III-VI of measures 1 & 2). I call this the diatonic cycle of fifths, and since "Peri's Scope" does not modulate to another key, I rate it as a very imaginative diatonic composition for that reason. Bill had a composer's ear for variety and learned how to effectively use secondary dominants (see measures 7, 8,14,15,16 & 20). This makes Peri's Scope a challenge to the improviser. The challenge is unique because you meet the secondary dominants in different ways and in different parts of the phrase.
8) and it's the climax of the first phrase of the tune. It's very sudden. It jumps out at us.