Walkdown
"Walkup" redirects here. For the American basketball player, see Thomas Walkup.
![](../I/m/Walkdown_I_V_vi.png)
Country walkdown, in blue, with Carter Family picking.
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In country music, walkdown is a bassline which connects two chords whose roots are a third apart, often featuring an inverted chord.[1] See: slash chord. A walkup would be the converse.
For example G and Em (a minor third apart) may be joined by an intervening chord to create stepwise motion in the bass: G-D/F♯-Em (I-V6/4-vi).
In jazz, a walkdown is a descending bassline below chords sharing a common tone.[2] For example, if the above was G-D/F♯-Em7 the bassline would descend, G, F♯, E, while D is held in common.
Walkdown may also refer to the movement from V to IV in bars nine and ten of the twelve-bar blues.[3]
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