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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
It’s been baked into the very sense of key for ever - the idea of key being a scale being quite a modern idea really - very modern. What we think of as tonal music really saw those sort of mild chromaticisms (Bb and F#) as part of the key rather than modulations per se. And of course it shows up in jazz. Later theory bangs on about secondary dominant chords and so on, but really it comes out of the melody, and the standard basses people would write. Tonicising the II in something called ‘a Fonte’ was very typical. This is preserved in jazz language. If you’ve noticed bebop turnarounds in Bach, this is why.
The middle 8s of Alone Together or Night in Tunisia are classical fontes. Tonicise IIm, tonicise I in modern terms
Barry was ALL about this stuff. Classical music was very important to him.
Modern guitar players I think have very limited exposure to trad western tonality generally compared to pianists. It can be a bit confusing if you are used to the tonality of pop/rock music.
I know it was true for me - I don’t feel I grew up with it. My early background was more in modal and rock/pop based music. The Beatles, Zeppelin, and so on (boomer parents) rather than Mozart or GASB. Vamps, V7sus chords, bVII7s ….
Trane made sense to me right away, Bird less so.
Took me years!
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by Christian Miller; 04-20-2024 at 07:08 PM.
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04-20-2024 02:52 PM
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I mean if I had to pinpoint birds harmonic style apart from say Prez, I’d say it was in that tonicisation of the ii chord. With a VI7b9
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Thomas Echols has a new video, giving samples from his new book on generating linear playing—i.e, lines using BH’s methods. I ordered the book. Probably best to read it before really grokking what’s in the video.
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Interesting revelation from Thomas in the forward to the book:
”.The Monophonic side was a lot trickier. I practiced these techniques regularly (and with zeal) for about 7-8 years before they made any sense to me as a means for actually learning to improvise.It’s a bit embarrassing to admit this, but it’s true.”.
He is a trained classical guitarist.
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Interesting- it’s mostly the ‘monophonic’ stuff I found useful (Barry didn’t use this term, he called it ‘improvisation’ class)
I get why a Classically trained player would find it harder. Harmony is more familiar, polyphonic left hand technique makes Barry’s harmony stuff more accessible. Single note lines require a jazz sensibility and the ability execute fast swinging eights etc. Especially at the tempos Barry used to call these things in.
Again, get the DVDs and play through them lol. Then, pick up the tiny pieces of yourself off the floor …
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I play with classical technique and don't play many lines except as fills. I use the various 6th dims scales (including subs) for lines, and I do wonder sometimes why there is such a disconnect between the two approaches("improv" vs "harmony"). I guess soloing that way has different requirements (I could just never get to bebop tempos, or even close), but I'm not sure what. Maybe easier to teach to monophonic instruments? I mean, there must be a reason he bases it off of a 7 note scale rather than the symmetrical scales he uses for harmony. The latter would have symmetry as a starting point, as where using dom 7 scale "adds a note" right off the bat. Anyway, with single note playing as my weakness, making lines with 6 dim scales was very beneficial. I say this after years of trying the direct way he teaches lines; it just didn't work for me.
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Originally Posted by joe2758
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Originally Posted by joe2758
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Howard Rees
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Sitting on the deck pondering jazz and a thought came to me.
Why do we need the Barry Harris scale at all? If every other note of a scale is a chord tone, (1, 3, 5, 7) they naturally fall on the strong beats. Is it just to get the 6th tone on a strong beat?
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
EDIT: I should say: ... then you might need extra notes to make them "rhythmically correct", depending on where you start in the bar (beat or "and") and from which note you start. It is either no, two or three extra notes.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
Playing it for the second octave (or playing it starting anywhere but the root) and you end up switching to chord tones on the upbeats after the octave.
1 (2) 3 (4) 5 (6) 7 (1) 2 (3) 4 etc.
Same goes for major except that you want to use a 6 chord instead of a 7 chord and the major seven is already diatonic, so they put the passing note between 6 and 7. Same goes for the minor version.
Thats for the Barry Harris passing note scales. Very similar to the Dave Baker Bebop Scales. Difference being that BH doesn’t emphasize the chord tones on strong beats, so much as having the scale land on a chord tone. The chord tones on downbeats is incidental. With DB, it’s explicitly designed that way.
When you use the sixth diminished concept then you actually harmonize the passing note. So that’s a different thing. Thats the note that completes your passing diminished chord.
EDIT: also note that in his scale outlines, you do only play up to the seventh. And that’s so that you get kind of scale sound and chord sound in your ear in one shot, from what I understand.
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I was one note away from figuring it out. Haha.
Thanks
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
BarryHarrisVideos - YouTube
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
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Originally Posted by pamosmusic
EDIT: I remembered correctly. W/o "asking the bot" LOL.
EDIT2: Nice Christmas tree. Now back to listening to Charles McPherson interviews.
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Originally Posted by Bop Head
BH — if you start on, say, the 6 of a dominant chord, then you use no passing note. That gives you 6 (5) 4 (3) 2 (1) b7
or you could do the extra passing note between 2 and 1 to get you back there. But the chord tones on downbeats isn’t important so much as the landing on a chord tone at the end (coming out right).
DB — start on the 6 of the dominant chord, then insert a passing note inside the first available whole step. This means that chord tones will start landing on downbeats as soon as possible.
6 (b6) 5 (4) 3 (2) 1 (7) b7 etc
A passing note in my understanding is a note located pitch-wise between two notes. Which happens with Dave Baker's one chromatic passing tone in his bebop scales. In Barry's teaching not the pitch is important but the function as a rhythmic placeholder is important,
so the chord tones can come out rhythmically correct -- on strong beats.
Applies only to the dominant scales (aka "mixolydian" to Berklee-oids). For major and minor (melodic minor ascending version for ascending and descending, sometimes called "jazz minor") the most important extra note is placed between fifths and sixth.
And the Barry Harris stuff is interesting I think, because the rules are subservient to the musical result. So I think it’s easy to read the rules or listen to them outlined and think we’re talking about the same thing as Dave Baker but it’s evident when you play through them that they’re different in small but very meaningful ways. The BH ones are looser which I think makes them easier to work with.
Anyway — Christian or Alan would be better equipped for this discussion, so I’m happy to be corrected or clarified on any of this. Interloper that I am
EDIT - The Barry Harris passing note rules allow space for adding other passing notes too, but that’s later stuff and most of the stuff from the early workshops emphasizes the basic 1/3 passing notes for chord tones, 0/2 for non.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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A quick question when outlining a minor tonality: what 7 does Barry Harris play or suggest? The Howard Rees book has you go up to b6, 6 ... then back down. Never outlines using a 7. I assume a ^7 because that would be in the dim part of the dim-6 scale, but that is a very particular sound. Take the first two bars of Blue Bossa as an example. When actually building a solo would Barry Harris teach a natural B in the first two bars? Would I ever outline a tonic minor using the relative major6-dim scale? Eb-dim scale outline over the tonic C-7 of Blue Bossa?
No doubt this has been covered before. Unfortunately the search function of this forum isn't great for finding something specific.
Thanks.
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Originally Posted by rlrhett
Edit: I'm referring to tonic minor in general, not Blue Bossa specifically. But I don't see why should the tonic of Blue Bossa not be Cmin6.Last edited by Tal_175; 07-04-2024 at 01:10 PM.
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Blue Bossa is a tricky case, in that the tonic minor chord is often played as a minor 7, which would suggest that Eb6 dim thing.
It is helpful that Barry happens to be playing piano on the famous Dexter Gordon recording of the tune, but I haven't listened carefully enough to hear what he's doing there.
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Originally Posted by rlrhett
Barry didn't tend to use the maj6-dim that much as a source for lines, at least in the classes I attended.
Barry did mention melodic minor and the '3' phrase in minor has a melodic minor vibe.
Barry's own solo on Blue Bossa is here. He is using a mix of natural minor and harmonic.
One thing that strikes me HARD about this is that Barry isn't using the major 6th, A on the minor chord. He sometimes plays an Ab in passing. He uses both the Bb and B although the B is used more as a lower neighbour tone than a harmonic sound. He uses the Bb as part of an Ebmaj7 arpeggio (he would have said "chord").
There's a lot of emphasis on the Cm triad notes. And even some blues! I would say that much of the time when I play bop I tend to focus on the minor triad chord tones or on the notes of the pentachord - 1 2 b3 4 5, unless I want to make a point of it. The 6th is quite a strident sound. I may have soaked this up from Barry, but it seems to be a nature of Parker's lines quite often, if you look at something like 'Segment'. I don't think he talked much about the top half of the minor scale in the lessons I was in. We also did a few m6-dim patterns, one of them he attributed to Coleman Hawkins.Last edited by Christian Miller; 07-04-2024 at 01:43 PM.
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You want an Ab on the Cm of Blue Bossa.
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Barry's minor 6th diminished scale contains all the notes of a harmonic minor and a melodic minor. Two chords: Tonic minor 6th with inversions. Natural 7 diminished with inversions. You can just play that scale and use the arpeggios/ triads as chord scales and it sounds great.
I believe the scales for soloing are Harmonic minor or Melodic minor. The chromatics that are available to add basically follow the rules of the major scale or the dominant scale, with some exceptions to deal with the extra half steps, especially within harmonic minor. He also discusses the use of the "tritone" melodic minor as a substitution scale within the context of the family of 4 related dominants ie: Ab melodic minor over G7. The goal being to end a phrase on a strong tone, usually a chord tone.
Also, all the triads and four tone chords of the related minor scales are available to use, along with the approach tones, enclosures, pivots that he discusses with the major and dominant scales
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