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Hey, if anyone have not seen yet, now it's the time to see the OP video :-)
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11-11-2019 01:35 PM
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Man... what would help guitarist with understanding theory, harmony etc... if your going to use composition, or more for this discussion, arranging techniques and terms... research them with composers and arrangers.
We as guitarist tend to develop our own personal terminology, (musical terminology slang...) we like calling starting scales from each scale degrees... modes, we seem to like calling harmonizing a scale as playing voicings moving up the neck in scalular movement patterns.
Most of our problems come from not starting with a reference.... what are you harmonizing and what is the organization behind choosing the added notes to what your harmonizing.
Traditionally we harmonize from the top down... but that's just a starting point of reference. Harmonizing a scales from the bottom up is cool... generally you would also have organization for what notes to add on top.
Most of us get chord voicing terms, like drop 2 or 3... which are terms from arranging techniques, that are adapted to guitar slang.
Getting back to using scale degrees as root motion for creating chord voicing on top of those scale degrees ...
Generally, each scale degree as root, implies a different chord. Inversions are using different arrangement of notes on top while still implying the same starting scale degree...
Cmaj as root or reference... and playing diatonic triads in ascending scalular motion above. The triad voicings have a dropped 5th
C- GCE C maj triad
C- ADF D min triad
C- BEG E min triad
C- CFG F maj triad
C- DGB G maj triad
C- EAC A min triad
C- FBD B min b5 triad (dim)
You could do same thing with Diatonic 7th chord.... or create whatever type of notes and voicing organization you choose, or type of motion.... 3rds, 4ths any cycle etc...
All these are with "Cmaj" as the root or Reference.
You can then use the actual scale degrees as the roots of the chord movement and harmonize above that root motion... Cma, D-, E- Fma etc... and now your harmonizing a diatonic scale degree root motion pattern.... would still need to define the organization for creating the voicings on top of that root motion.
What usually happens... we as guitarist tend to create whatever we can play. ( Well I don't, I'm a composer and arranger from the stone ages, and I tend to play as an arranger... screws up my playing ), and label it as whatever works for the moment. Which is OK. Some of our BS actually catches on.
Once you begin to open the doors of musical organization... your in trouble. There are very good reasons why most players say... I just play what sounds right in the moment.
I forgot to say
The vid sounds like standard II- V voicing lick.... Fmin to Bb7... from Wes style, I know I use those licks all the time... of course much hipper LOL I think I've actually written them out somewhere on the forum
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Originally Posted by WILSON 1
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Originally Posted by grahambop
The OP opened this thread with a question on the source or theory behind that scale harmonization @ 1:36.
I stated that the "source" was Ab 6 dim scale not that was the scale being played.
The first chord can be read: F-7 or Ab6 / Eb.
The second chord: F-9 or Ab6 /Eb an inversion of Ab6 with the soprano note G borrowed from the following dim chord Edim of the 6 dim scale.
The third chord: straight up Ab6 / F
The forth chord: G dim7 (from the scale) with a borrowed alto note F and borrowed soprano note C from the root version of Ab6.
Last chord: Ab6 root position.
There is no need to play the actual dims or inversions to utilize the 6 dim scale as a harmonizing theory.
I believe this is in the spirit in which the question was first posted.
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I wrote what I thinks the chords are in the first post. There are no dim7 chords. Have a look and see what you think. His fingerings are fairly easy to see.
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Oh wait, I see what you mean. I still don’t think you have the voicings right tho.
Well I mean you could say all major scale harmonisations use the maj6-dim scale if you like. It’s not wrong. But then it’s also not wrong to say that the maj6-dim scale is the what happens when you swap in the harmonic major.... (listens to outraged screams of the Barry faithful)
It’s not the most commonplace explanation. It’s also not the way most Barry students would think to use the scale.
Tbh I don’t think it’s terribly useful from the point of pedagogy. What I think constitutes useful teaching in this context is to use as a little theory is necessary.
But you know some people like the theory. So long as they don’t mistake it for y’know actually being able to play things on the guitar...
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Wilson, there are no diminished chords in the first run up that Pearson did. You're seeing things.
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He is playing a modal vamp in the Ionian mode.
I just thought this would be a good time to invite the modes to the party. The OP has seen nothing yet.
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Originally Posted by WILSON 1
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Originally Posted by ragman1
F**k me this thread is something else, I am impressed with what the OP has achieved here with an apparently innocent question, I take my hat off to him.Last edited by grahambop; 11-11-2019 at 08:06 PM.
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Well yes he is borrowing from the diminished from the BH point of view. But that's not in anyway universal way to look at it. Jimi Hendrix embellished triads the same way. I bet he wasn't thinking 6th diminished scales and borrowing. That's Barry Harris's theoretical framework for common and intuitive arrangement techniques. Which is elegant and all but it's just one point of view.
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It's not even Ionian. There's no 4th degree in any of the chords.
So I say it's drawn from the Lydian! I have no actual proof, but hey.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
Meanwhile, apparently this guy is respected, ....and we anonymous folks commentate on the inter-webs.Last edited by matt.guitarteacher; 11-11-2019 at 10:47 PM.
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I can't believe such a mundane OP turned into such a disaster thread...
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Yes, he's certainly respected because he's a very good player and entertainer. Check out his website. I like it, it's very good stuff, very commercial. But it's not jazz. The jazz mindset is different.
This isn't snobbery at all. It's different kinds of music we're talking.
JACK PEARSON
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Good video, by the way.
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tbh I tried to apply some consequent harmonization rules in jazz playing (the same way as I do in classical for example)... but almost always it sounded so awkward and forced out that I finally came to elaborating something just choosing the voicing by ear and trying to relate sequence with harmonic changes that are behind it...
that is I hear it is all Ab major... but if I need to alter something hear or there I just do it by ear...
This is very true in regards to the way independent part writing is taught in schools although greater
leniency was allowed for parallel 1st inversion triads. Long before jazz existed as a word, classical method books have included parallel melodic presentations of scales as a basic technique exercise. Hanon style exercises are nothing but diatonic parallelism. So while independent voices was the guiding principle for part writing, diatonic parallelism was still presented as the clearest way to learn about inversions.
Further forward, some classical music composers began incorporating constant structure parallelism
into their compositions.
I would say - if we take the most generic classical language in functional tonality (like from high baroque through classicm to early romantic) - they never harmonize every note of the melody, they harmonize function that is expressed in the melody... (whether they did it conciously or not)...
this is just different way of thinking that we have in jazz... I would say classical thinking here would be just more spacious --- even if speak about counterpointas methods with voice against voice writing...
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Jack Peason is not a jazz musician, he's just another guitar player who can play jazz, because his bag is bigger than jazz. He knows as much theory as Wes and Grant Green did, so he's limited like they were. I wouldn't want to waste my time with lessons from a hack like him....he can only play, but probably can't hang with the geeks from Nerdsville Academy.
Last edited by cosmic gumbo; 11-12-2019 at 06:03 AM.
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Within the organization of a song's form and progression, we all come to recognize certain places, certain chord harmonies, certain places within the song from which we know by experience that strings of chord changes may be played there. In the blues world, these strings of chords may be just a couple of chords, and in the jazz world we all know some of the popular short strings of chords, but if you play with this idea a while, you can find long strings of six to twelve or more chords that do this. These are not just inversions or voicing; the long strings span an express a couple of harmonic changes, so maybe the first two chords span a progression chord, the next two span the next progression chord... these are harmonic pathways from one chord in the progression to another, or through a few chords to another. They are often modified to voice the melody line, or to drop the melody line for comping... or just understood as harmonic vocabulary to organize soloing.
examples:
Short string of four through one change Abm7 -> Bb(7)
Abm7
4x4446
x6667x
x89811x
Bb(7)
x11121211x
Longer string of six through three changes Abm7 -> Dd(9) -> G9b5 -> Gb(69)
Abm7
4x4446
x6667x
Dd(9)
x89811x
x11121114x
G9b5
x14151417x
Gb(69)
x 13131314x
Longer string of six spanning a static chord Ab(69)
Ab(69)
x1112x
x3334x
x6667x
x8889x
x11111112x
x13131314x
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Originally Posted by ragman1
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Originally Posted by grahambop
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Welcome to the JGO world of bullshit LMFAO
(I love it, WTF is wrong with me??)
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Originally Posted by pauln
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I've just realised what he was doing. That first run on the first video, he was playing 'There Will Never Be Another You'. He said he got shown it by Richard Cotten who founded the Cotten Music Centre.
I can see the attraction to the OP, who's a blues/rock player who's interested in different sounds. Nothing wrong with that, of course, it's probably why we're all here.
It's quite interesting. Worth a thread of its own or a PhD... are jazz players born or made? I think they're born. You're either 'jazz' or you're not. It's in your DNA or it's not. We can learn it, become fairly efficient even, but deep down there are folkies, blues people, classical people, etc etc - and jazz people. And there are probably different kinds of jazz people too.
At least, that's the theory.
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Originally Posted by christianm77
Mental check on buying a good guitar
Today, 10:38 AM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos