T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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420.1 | | MIST::CARSTENSEN | | Thu Dec 10 1987 23:07 | 24 |
|
What a good question! I had a big problem applying modes and such
for along time. About a year ago I started taking guitar lessons
from a great teacher who I feel very lucky to have found.
To apply them, I think of the modifications to the major scale.
I am trying not to play only patterns, but instead to know what
note I am playing at all times and how it fits into the chord
over which I am playing.
I am beginning to be able to hear the sound of the mode in my head.
I have a feeling that this may take a while. I have a tuning fork
that I carry aroung with me sometimes. It has really helped to
develop my ear. That, in turn, helps me recognize the note that I
am hearing in my head which I am ultimately trying to get out of
the guitar.
What really helped in my applications of modes was learning the
fingerboard better, learning to play in all the keys, learning
the notes in all the keys, and learning some rules of harmony.
frank
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420.2 | How I spent my summer vacation... | HAVOC::DESROCHERS | It's far too wet to woo | Fri Dec 11 1987 09:40 | 45 |
|
I use a few methods.
For mixolydian (blues) scales, say it's a G7... I either
play a Gmaj scale and think "flat 7", or play a Cmaj scale
over it, or a Dmin scale, etc.. or think of the 3 5 7 shape in
different orders.
For minor scales, say it's an Amin... if it feels like it
would go to a Dmaj then it's the Dorian mode so I'll think
Gmaj or the "normal" (Dorian) Amin, or D7... If the Amin
goes to a Dmin, then I'll think Cmaj riffs (that sus4 note
in Cmaj is the difference... If it's Latin (phrygian), I'll
pretend I'm Al DiMeola... seriously, in Amin I'd think of
Fmaj scales and Gmin "normal" Dorian, or C7...
The easiest way for me to "hear" the modes is to tape
the chords to do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, do. Then just
play the do (Ionian) major scale over them.
do re mi fa so la ti do
C Dmin Emin F G7 Amin Bo7 C
Tape yourself playing just Cmaj and play the normal Cmaj
scale. Don't change chords... just Cmaj.
Then just Dmin chords... 5 minutes of Dmin chords. Play
the Cmaj scale. Resolve on the 3 motes of the Dmin (D F A).
Then Emin chords... play the Cmaj scale and resolve to the
3 notes of Emin (E G B)
Then F chords... play the Cmaj scale and resolve to the 3
notes of F (F A C)
Then G7 chords... play the Cmaj scale and resolve to the 4
notes of G7 (G B D F) especially the F...
Then Amin chords... play the Cmaj scale and resolve to the 3
notes of Amin (A C E)
Then Bo7 chords... play the Cmaj scale and resolve to the 4
notes of the Bo7 (B F D Ab)
This is how I first "heard" the modes.
|
420.3 | Mongous Modal Madness | SMURF::BENNETT | Bach is Dead! | Tue Jun 12 1990 12:05 | 35 |
|
OK. So we've inherited this musical system where in a tempered
chromatic scale of 12 tones we create 7 tone scales. By necesity
these scales contain 5 whole tone intervals and 2 half tone
intervals. We can represent the placement of the half tones within
the scale by using 1 digit for each in a modulo 7 number system.
This gives us numbers representing the 7 ecclesiastical modes:
Mode Pattern Mod7 representation
-----------------------------------------------------------
Ionian (1,1,1/2,1,1,1,1/2) 26 (maj)
Dorian (1,1/2,1,1,1,1/2,1) 15 (min)
Phrygian (1/2,1,1,1,1/2,1,1) 04 (min)
Lydian (1,1,1,1/2,1,1,1/2) 36 (maj)
Mixolydian (1,1,1/2,1,1,1/2,1) 25 (maj)
Aolean (1,1/2,1,1,1/2,1,1) 14 (min)
Locrian (1/2,1,1,1/2,1,1,1) 03 (dim)
And we can locate the modes in a chart of all 2 digits pairs
(49 of them). Because of the symmetry of the representation,
only those pairs above the diagonal are shown.
01 02 03* 04* 05 06
12 13 14* 15* 16
23 24 25* 26*
34 35 36*
45 46
56
Common modes are marked with (*).
Now for the question: Are there known studies in the harmonic
systems suggested by the modes not marked in the chart?
|
420.4 | Modal Help | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | | Wed Jun 20 1990 01:35 | 27 |
| I have some questions on modal playing:
1. I know that a mode is relating a scale to a chord because
of it's position in the harmonized major scale.
eg. Playing in the key of C, you are playing Dm,G7,Cmaj7
you can use the dorian mode to improvise,which means you
play a c scale running from d to d.
So does this mean when you are soloing modally, that you
change scale for every chord.
2. If this is the case how do you relate what you are
hearing in your head to the fretboard.
3. The dorian mode I mentioned above works well with that
jazz II,V,I progression, do any of the other modes relate
that well to other common progressions eg I,II,IV,V
4.What determines the tonal centre of a tune, I read some
where that where ever you see a IV,V chord together that
tells you. For example you see f then g so the tonal centre
is C. Do you shift this during your modal playing.
Any advise would be appreciated
P.K.
|
420.5 | | HPSRAD::JWILLIAMS | | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:28 | 17 |
| re -1:
The tonal center is mostly a psychological phenomenon. The are clues in
the music that point towards tonal centers. For example, your
progression of I, II, IV, V could just as easily ( and more likely
to ) be IV, V, VII, I. There are zillions of books written on this,
but most of them confirm common sense. I have found that very few
modern songs begin on the tonic. Those that do repeat it. A good
excersize to determine where a tonic is is to come up with a feasible
ending ( or cadence ). That will most likely be your tonic. It general,
Progressions that lead to a tonic are up a 2nd, down a 3rd, or up a
4th. Your tonic can be preceeded by a Vs and VIIs ( secondary
dominants ), with each chord being preceeded by its own V or VII
without introducing modulation ( changing keys ).
Good luck,
John.
|
420.6 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Learning the First Noble Truth | Wed Jun 20 1990 18:10 | 17 |
| > 1. I know that a mode is relating a scale to a chord because
> of it's position in the harmonized major scale.
> eg. Playing in the key of C, you are playing Dm,G7,Cmaj7
> you can use the dorian mode to improvise,which means you
> play a c scale running from d to d.
> So does this mean when you are soloing modally, that you
> change scale for every chord.
Well, you're actually playing the same scale. D-dorian has the same notes as
C-major. If you're really playing modally - using only notes and chords from
the chosen mode - then you have the same set of notes to use regardless of the
current chord.
Improvisation can get more interesting if you judiciously add notes from
outside the mode.
Bob
|
420.7 | | HPSRAD::JWILLIAMS | | Thu Jun 21 1990 13:36 | 16 |
| About adding notes outside the mode:
Got to be careful here, most excursions outside a mode need to be
resolved in a different key. While there are no hard and fast rules,
here are some guidelines:
1) Keep the emphasis off the chromatic note, use it only to resolve to
a more dominant note, like a 1, 3, or a 5.
2) Keep the interval small. Don't jump around alot. The most common
interval to use is 2.
3) Keep the chromatics in the direction of resolution. For example, if
you're playing up to a cadence, you can try chromatic sharps.
John.
|
420.8 | Lydian Bill strikes again | CAVLRY::BUCK | I don't wanna cry no more | Wed Feb 26 1992 21:40 | 10 |
| I hereby dub our favorite "Bill the Cat" (STAR::SALKEWICZ) from now on
to be referred to as "Lydian Bill"
He insistantly played #4's this eve while in the key of C Major...NO
excuse!! Something about that 3rd beat of that 3rd measure throwing
him for a loop!
8^)
TheOtherBill
|
420.9 | nailed! | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Mon Mar 02 1992 13:32 | 21 |
| AAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRFGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!
I've been Buckleyed,.,..
I don't knwo what the problem is,.. everybody knows that
the C major scale is spelled C D E F# G... right?
:)
I Hate it when this happens,,..
But the funny thing to me really is that I've always referred to
Lydian as Buckley mode anyway... :-)
Now he's referring to me as Catlydian.
Things that make you go Huh?
/Bill_the_cat
|
420.10 | wanna do this one again? | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Mon Mar 02 1992 15:19 | 10 |
| I'll never learn....I STILL think that "Can't ya see" and ALL those
OTHER D,C,G, or A,G,D tunes from the southern rock scene are in the
"key" of the first chord listed (D and A, respectively) and are
considered I VII IV progressions......the leads are "usually" a major
pentationic in the position of the first chord, and minor pentatonics
work great in those positions as well...
Steve (who opened up a 20 reply fiasco last time)
8^)
|
420.11 | Jane!,.. stop this crazy thing! | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Mon Mar 02 1992 15:25 | 16 |
| ruh-roh
Here we go agaon,...
FWIW,. my old bass player swares that Dear Mr. Fantasy (G-F-C-G) is
a I, flat VII, IV progression,... and like Steve says,.. I had
a lot of fun playing G pent. minor and G blues kinds of leads over
it...
Then I listened to Buck,... and then I prayed to the mixo Gods,.. and
now I would play G mixo stuff,.. C major related...
So that leaves me firmly on the fence :-)
/Bill_no_help_at_all
|
420.12 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | I hate everything about you! | Mon Mar 02 1992 20:10 | 7 |
| >I'll never learn....I STILL think that "Can't ya see" and ALL those
>OTHER D,C,G, or A,G,D tunes from the southern rock scene are in the
>"key" of the first chord listed (D and A, respectively)
NOT! ;')
|
420.13 | That's my boy, Elroy! | CAVLRY::BUCK | I hate everything about you! | Mon Mar 02 1992 20:16 | 15 |
| CatLydian laments:
>FWIW,. my old bass player swares that Dear Mr. Fantasy (G-F-C-G) is
>a I, flat VII, IV progression,... and like Steve says,.. I had
>a lot of fun playing G pent. minor and G blues kinds of leads over
>it...
>
>Then I listened to Buck,... and then I prayed to the mixo Gods,.. and
>now I would play G mixo stuff,.. C major related...
It's really apples and oranges, but to me, you need the addl. anaylsis
if you're gonna do anything outside of the G PentaBlues stuff. Like
the full Mixolydian mode, which as Wayne Campbell would say, is
EXCELLENT! What about chromatic approach notes? Guide tone lines?
Can't get em from da blues scale.
|
420.14 | taste's great...... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Tue Mar 03 1992 07:58 | 10 |
| re: last two.....
Darn, only two replies....and no "point/counterpoint" insult/slams of
death.....I just can't start a brew-ha like I used to.....
BTW, I'm gonna bring my Les Paul to the homeland during the last week
of DECworld, maybe Buck can teach this old dog sumthin' about this mixo
stuff.....
Steve
|
420.15 | MIX it up | CAVLRY::BUCK | I hate everything about you! | Tue Mar 03 1992 08:11 | 5 |
| Actually, I should say that no one should just play ONE thing...
Cat will tell ya I strong suggest MIXING it up...Do blues and
mixo and arpeggios with chrostic approach notes and polyphonic
lines and all sorts of neat stuff...don't limit yourself, your
solo, or your creativity...
|
420.16 | Buck, you're new personal is, uh, biting? ;^) | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:05 | 14 |
|
> Do blues and
> mixo and arpeggios with chrostic approach notes and polyphonic
> line
uh, ok, I'll do that next time...what you just said, that stuff...yeah.
Steve (who's idea of mixing is major pent, minor pent, octave changes,
and some weird stuff I learned by copying by ear and don't know the
name of, and also just has fun playing what he knows 'cause he doesn't
have time to really practice and learn new stuff, 'cause he has a
family and plays golf, and restores vintage motorcycles, and competes
on off road motorcycles, and spends time with his wife and kids, and
goes camping, etc...)
|
420.17 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Ren and Stimpy...the Lost Episodes | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:20 | 2 |
|
and Steve also plays kick-ass guitar w/o the fancy stuff!
|
420.18 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | I hate everything about you! | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:22 | 4 |
| RE -2
Vintage motorcycles?? Get me an indian, and I'll show you ALL my
secrets! ]8^)
|
420.19 | gosh, gee, golly.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:37 | 7 |
| > and Steve also plays kick-ass guitar w/o the fancy stuff!
Why, thank you, Pat....made MY day!
:^)
Stevo
|
420.20 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:46 | 9 |
| I second what Pat says.
Buck - He won't do an Indian (unless he finds one), but he might find ya
a vintage DT1 or old Trials bike (How about a '76 Bultaco Sherpa T ?? :).
jc (who also does the dirt bike thing - big-buck hobby number 2!)
PS - Bucks Personal name is a line from a most triumphant song by Ugly
Kid Joe... Man that song is a BLAST to play !!!!!!!!!!!
|
420.21 | rulin tune | CAVLRY::BUCK | I hate everything about you! | Tue Mar 03 1992 09:48 | 8 |
| >(How about a '76 Bultaco Sherpa T ?? :).
I'll TAKE it!!
>PS - Bucks Personal name is a line from a most triumphant song by Ugly
> Kid Joe... Man that song is a BLAST to play !!!!!!!!!!!
Agreed!
|
420.22 | yes, yes, and yes.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Tue Mar 03 1992 10:15 | 12 |
| RE: Sherpa....Jes finished a '74 Yamaha TY250 Trials...gonna ride the Mid
Atlantic Vintage Trials series.....need practice!
RE: Buck's personal...oh, I thought you were in some kinda 'dark' mood
or sumthin....
RE: Coop....big buck hobby indeed!... and thanks to you too for yer
compliment...yer not too shabby yerself, bud, and the Blair unit is the
fastest student I EVER taught...very dedicated!
Steve(who can't believe we're talkin' dirt bikes in THIS conference
TOO!...guess we'd better take it elswhere...)
|
420.23 | Idiotlyian mode | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | do it in dubly | Tue Mar 03 1992 19:10 | 21 |
| Ok Ok Ok,
Let me see if I got this right.
I'm playing blues in E .... E A B
Now I would solo using the E blues scale (minor pent? I think)
Now to do this mixo stuff on the E (I) chord I would play notes
from the A major scale...A(IV) chord notes from the E major scale
and for the B(V) chord notes from the F major scale IS that it???
Assuming that what I just said is okay.........that is a fair amount
of mind gymnastics for me as when I am in blues scale mode (idiotlyian
mode) I just think of one scale not three cross related to another
three.
Any good patterns to shift over the chords for the mixo mode so I can
practice hearing this without spending 5 mins for each chord change.
P.K.
|
420.24 | Well, sort of.... | SMURF::BENNETT | What goes down the stairs alone or in pairs? | Wed Mar 04 1992 10:39 | 11 |
|
the E minor pent/blues scale that I'd use over E-A-B (I-IV-V)
is E-G-A-Bb-B-D-E
The Mixolidian scale to solo over this is rooted on V -
mixo is always rooted on V in a major key - is:
B-C#-D#-E-F#-G#-A-B
Give it a try. Put the chord changes on tape and wail away!
|
420.25 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Let's do the Scooby Doo ending! | Wed Mar 04 1992 11:53 | 13 |
| Well, if the domanance is real heavy, like I7-IV7-V7, I'll play
E Mixo - E F# G# A B C# D E
A Mixo - A B C# D D F# G A
B Mixo - B C# D# E F# G# A B
Note the common tones between modes.
Also, try adding the natural 6th to the blues scale...
E-G-A-Bb-B-C#-D-E
**
|
420.26 | A mode by any other name would still be a mode, jst the saem | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Wed Mar 04 1992 17:47 | 23 |
| you know,.. the debates and comments about knowing the modes and stuf
just makes me want to add this thought,...
When I first started learning this stuff from Buck, I realized that I
had learned it all bass ackwards, and that the first thing I had to
do was "throw out" or "forget" everything I had learned on my own.
So I did,.. and I started listening to Buck and working my feeble mind
like real hard into the wee hours to understand how it all fit
together. Now its several months later and what Buck says makes total
sense to me now. But the real interesting and encouraging part is that
once I understood the proper terminology for the stuff, I realized
that all the stuff I threw out was originally OK.... I just had a lot
of the wrong names for it.
Some of you who are afraid of theory might find like I did that
actually you already know a sh*tload of theory,.. but not by the proper
names.
Just FYI or whatever. To me,. its just a matter of learning the right
names for things.
/Catlydian
|
420.27 | Music beyond scales | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Mar 04 1992 18:31 | 15 |
| Yo Billy,
I found something similar after I learned a little theory. I was
looking at an old notebook of ideas I'd written down years before, when
I knew absolutely *nothing* about music (and very little about playing
guitar even) and found that a lot of the ideas that I thought were cool
enough to try and write down and save were actually modal-based rather
then off a blues scale or pentatonic maj/min. Amazing what listening
to your ear rather then your rote knowledge will do for your music,
'cause the only scale I knew back then was a blues scale (but I wasn't
afraid to go outside it and experiement, I just didn't know what I was
doing).
Greg
|
420.28 | the only thing to fear is,. fear itself | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Thu Mar 05 1992 12:19 | 11 |
| exactly Greg
My point is that if you feel you have musical knowledge, but don't know
theory, don't be afraid to learn some theory. It just gives you a
consistent naming scheme for stuff and a lot of stuff you hear begins
to be easily "figured out" because you recognize such and such as,. oh
say,.. Dorian mode,.. or pentatonic major,.. or <insert any name for
anything>. Learning theory will not take away from your ability to
"play what you feel".
/Catatonic,.. and"I aint 'fraid-a-no theory
|
420.29 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Let's do the Scooby Doo ending! | Thu Mar 05 1992 12:25 | 10 |
| and to cap off this theory discussion...
Ya know, when I solo or play in general, i ain't thinkin numbers or
whatever...after a while, all this stuff just becomes subliminal!
Like the jazz dude who said "learn theory, then forget it and play.
But you can't just play"...that is really true.
Buck, who sez learn it then forget it
|
420.30 | learn it and forget it | SMURF::BENNETT | What goes down the stairs alone or in pairs? | Thu Mar 05 1992 13:59 | 8 |
|
I couldn't have said it better. & I agree with Bill - learning
theory does not remove the ability to play what you feel.
I spend most of my time working on theory and technique because
really choice moments of inspired playing are so rare. So I see
the work on theory and technique as a means of "preparing the
vehicle".
|
420.31 | Learn it - apply it | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Soaring on the wings of dawn | Fri Mar 06 1992 13:00 | 31 |
| All those kind of dudes that avoid theory on the premise that it
will somehow constrain or hinder them somehow are just making
excuses IMHO.
I certainly didn't become a strictly-scales player when I started
studying the modes for example.
The benefits of studying theory (I'll never claim that I've "learned
theory") have been:
1) Being able to play over stuff that I previously couldn't
by understanding what's happening harmonically.
It expanded what my ear could comprehend - it did not
contract it.
2) It gives me an additional compositional tool.
I can hear an example of a particular thing, remember it,
and while I'm writing and looking on how to make something
sound a little different or whatever, I can draw on those
things and apply them to the song.
Sure, I can't quite do it in real-time always, but even
just as an aid to writing, it's worthwhile.
3) It has expanded my musical vocabulary.
I used to be constrained to playing only what my ear could
come to understand on its own. Now I can add things that
my ear has come to understand via the help of my brain.
|
420.32 | Second that motion | GANTRY::ALLBERY | Jim | Fri Mar 06 1992 14:49 | 5 |
| RE .31
I couldn't agree more.
Jim
|
420.33 | another affirmative response | EZ2GET::STEWART | the leper with the most fingers | Fri Mar 06 1992 15:17 | 10 |
|
> All those kind of dudes that avoid theory on the premise that it
> will somehow constrain or hinder them somehow are just making
> excuses IMHO.
Yeah, kinda like the biker that says he dropped his bike to "avoid an
accident"...
If you're in the environment, you gotta know what's goin' on!
|
420.34 | I'm enriched..... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Mon Mar 09 1992 12:37 | 12 |
| RE: Mixo scales....
I tried the mixo scale that was shown a few replies back.......oh,
I've been using those notes for years...I thought they were just kinda
"spicing" up the major pentatonic leads....never knew they had a name!
keep on larnin'!
8^)
Steve
|
420.35 | Go fot it dood! | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Mon Mar 09 1992 12:56 | 8 |
| Thats what I meant when I said that people don't realize that they
know and use a lot of theory already whne they play,.. they just don't
know what to call it,...
Cool Steve,.. happy pickin'
/Bill
|
420.36 | yeah! | NAVY5::SDANDREA | What, me worry? | Wed Mar 11 1992 09:06 | 11 |
| RE: -1
Bill,
I was foolin around with that scale over a major pentatonic last night,
and I started realizing (I think), that this sounds alot like what
Dickie Betts, (or maybe it was MR. Allman) uses in alot of tunes....
?
Steve (who didn't use the "flat root" much, but it sounds cool in the
right place!)
|
420.37 | Is this it????? | GIDDAY::KNIGHTP | do it in dubly | Wed Mar 11 1992 20:39 | 14 |
| Well...
There I was last night playing away and after a couple of million
attempts to understand what modes were ....well .....I think it
happened.
I was rehearsing Mustang Sally for the band and got bored and
started to play little runs when I remember someone saying Flat 7th
So I played the Bb major scale with a flattened 7th over the Bb or
I chord in the song and hey presto Mixo heaven .........please tell
me if this is right....If it isn't it sounded cool anyway ...
actually it sounded very BB King and not quite as harsh as the blues
scale more mellow
P.K. (who may just have cracked it for modal playing)
|
420.38 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | XVII days to Coaster Season!!! | Thu Mar 12 1992 06:52 | 9 |
| > I was rehearsing Mustang Sally for the band and got bored and
>started to play little runs when I remember someone saying Flat 7th
>So I played the Bb major scale with a flattened 7th over the Bb or
>I chord in the song and hey presto Mixo heaven .........please tell
>me if this is right....If it isn't it sounded cool anyway ...
Yup, dats it dood!!
Buck, creating a legion of Mixo Monsters!
|
420.39 | Catlydianalysis | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Thu Mar 12 1992 14:12 | 35 |
| re .36
Well A pentatonic major is:
A B C# E F# A
and A mixo is
A B C# D E F# G A
So when you switched to mixo,. you were basically adding the
(cool) flat 7 (G), and the natural 4 (D) to your pentatonic
major.
Dicky Betts, Duane Allmand,.. and hosts of others have used these
scales seperately and together. I have always said that nobody gets
more mileage out of a pentatonic major scale than does Dicky. Its
quite possible this mind of mode switch was used by either or both of
them,.. but I can't think of any Almman examples,.. at least not
without my axe in hand.
What song (if any) did it remind you of?
re .38,.. mixo monsters,...
:-)
re .37
so,. you wanna be dracula or frankenstein? :-)
/Bill
|
420.40 | | GIAMEM::RATTEY | | Fri Mar 13 1992 06:45 | 6 |
|
One of Duanes that comes to mind....( actually it's a Donavan's tune)
is Mountain Jam.....dualing penta-mania...
.Ray.
|
420.41 | It's ALL GOOD!!! | PHHSS1::SOBEL | Nothing But the Blues | Wed Apr 30 1997 14:28 | 20 |
| IMHO...EVERYTHING SAID HERE IS VALID!! All you can learn is good.
NEver stop learning! Yes, there is a danger of sounding like you're
just playing modes/scales especially if you're learning this way as
opposed to us older dudes who picjked up a guitar before "modal theory"
became popular. Other way was to approach improvisation out of the
chord forms...something incidentally that John Coltrane took to
incredible hights. But now we have to talk of what the be-bop
innovators did which was to build triads on top of triads and worry
about what to call it later. But in analysis, you CAN pick out what
"modes" are being played in their solos too. This idea has been hinted
at in associating a chord w/ a mode..ie: dmin7 as ii/DORIAN in key of C
Major.
Best thing...listen to the great jazz players eg: how Kenny Burrell
plays a blues or even how BB plays "major/minor" "blues" scale in a
riff...ie: e natural and e-flat in a C pattern.
Barry
|