70strathead wrote:
degenaro wrote:
70strathead wrote:
i love melodic minor modes. I'm still learning alot about them and how/when to apply and actually Greg Howe is who turned me on to them taught me a few examples of the mel minor over dom 7th thing. I really like the altered sound over the dominant 7 (#5 or b9) and the only way its easy for me to remember is Going “up a half-step” ..so over A7 would be the Bb melodic minor scale, which really creates that strong "outside" sound becasuse of the altered tension. I stilll have a ton to learn about these..great post Ed!
Ant for your stuff the harmonic minor up a 4th will be great too...i.e. A harmonic minor over E7, gives you all the chord tones and the b9 and #5. When you use melodic minor up a half step you get all the alterations...b9, #9, b5, #5.
As for alterations...
up a half, you get b5, #5, b9, #9
down a whole step you get b9.
up a 4th you get #5.
up a 5th, gives you the b5
up a b3, gives you b5, #5, #9
Plus if you add those 5 scales toss out all the doubles you get 11 notes...everything but the major 7....
thanks Ed. Question for ya. here's a chord progression I'm working on:
Dmin7add9 - F/Bb - C/Bb - Gm9 - A7#5 (b9)
if i wanted to imply Super Locrian Mode ( which i like the sound of), could i get away with playing that outside of the Em7b5 chord? or can i apply a Lydiant Dominant over the resolving A7 chord?
thx
A
Just so we're on the same page...you're asking about A super loc or A lyd doom over the A 7 alt. Right? Thing is in a progression with a functioning V it really belongs over the V..
For that you can really use either, super locrian is melody minor up a half..Lydian dominatn is mel min up a fifth.
So seeing that your V chord has the #5 and b9 I likely wouldn't go with lyd doom because that has the 5 and 9, especially since super locrian has the alterations you want.
Not sure where you get the Em7b5 but you can pretty much view it as part of the V...especially in this case since it makes the perfect ii-V-i
As for the profession period...
To me it's
i-bVI-bVII-iv-V
A very typical minor progression, which if you view it a major will be easier to grasp...
vi-IV-V-ii..I.e.
Dmin7 add9, not sure why the add since you have the 7 in it so technically it'd be Dm9,
Then the F/Bb is really a Bbmaj9, and the C/Bb is the V chord in major with the 7 in the bass, etc...
Reminds me of the ballad on the Stern play along.
But to get back to whether you can play super locrian across those changes without Em7b5 being there...
yes and no...you can do whatever you want, as long as you resolve.
But i'll be kinda weird since the chord where all weidness belongs to is a V chord. So, over the Dm9 going with e,f, g, ab, bb, c, d is kinda weird...and fwiw super locrian would be relating to the V not the ii.