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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
The Mark Levine ‘melodic minor voicing’ thing you mentioned above is the same sort of logic.
lot of mental arithmetic though and can take a while before it’s second nature, but once it is, playing changes is pretty easy and you get maximum bang for your buck. Once you have something you can put on minor, it goes on dominant, altered dominant, half diminished, and extended major etc.
A problem with parallel thinking is you can find yourself emphasising too much the bottom of the chord if you aren’t careful. Chord theory is … kind of upside down for guitarists? Jordan imploded my brain when he pointed out that the ‘resting notes’ of a Cmaj7 chord are, E B and G while C is actually a dissonant tension. Crazy right? But try it.
So, over the C maj7 chord, C is a dissonant note. Once you start hearing that, you can’t unhear it. That’s actually well known in arranging 101 but I’d never heard it framed like that before as a general rule.
the tensions are not tensions. They are the resting notes.
Similarly, the consonant notes on C7#9#5 are given by the Ab triad, not the C7(b5) chord.
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02-26-2023 05:15 PM
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I see a way to effective soloing by focusing on mixolydian (as a pool of notes, not a rigidly ordered arrangement, which means I could have said major or dorian etc) and learning a lot of situations in which it can be applied. From there, adjust just a note or two and there are a myriad of possibilities.
But first, on the way to good soloing, focus on good time and good melody.
The problem I've had with practicing scales is that my fingers gravitate to them unless I make an effort to control them. It would probably be better if my fingers gravitated towards jazz vocabulary.Last edited by rpjazzguitar; 02-27-2023 at 06:25 AM.
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
One of the first bits of advice I heard was that you shouldn’t play scales too stepwise. But dipping into Bach or Bird reveals rather a lot of exactly that. in fact there’s few more effective things you can do than play a step wise scale in the right place. It’s all over music. But of course what they mean is that sort of timid, halting thing beginners do where they creep around from note to note, not sure if what will come out…
The craft (not the art, the craft) lies in understanding how to create coherent lines from scalar and chordal raw materials… beyond simply listening to and transcribing a bunch of lines (which is cool), Barry offers a clear road map which is not quite unique afaik, but not something I see much of. It’s easier to discuss harmony than melody, it seems.
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Yea... who cares, if what one does works. Why bother...
The thing about names etc... they do sometimes comes into play... when composing or arranging.(and playing) I tend to hear modes with characteristic pitches and different BS harmonic movement and relationships . Like when I see, hear or from analysis decide on either Bb7#11 or lydian Dom. To me there is a difference. The Bb7#11 implies secondary motion or function, where as when I see Bb13#11 ....I see and hear Modal versions and guidelines , I see and hear and use different chord patterns. Sometimes it's not just the label, it's the relationship and their developments. I do get it... like I said if what you do works... why bother.
here's an old vid I posted that's very modal...
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This might well lead onto the ‘why can’t jazz musicians spell?’ and ‘what’s your beef with key signatures Jamie? it’s literally a rhythm changes in B flat!’ rants
i swear jazz educators just want to make everything look as complicated and use as much ink as possible
Mind you you nutters still use imperial, so all bets are off, which is weird because you quite sensibly tidied up your cities into nice grids
right, I’m off to decimalise time. See you in a kilosecond. Vive la revolution!
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I guess one can do just about anything and make it work in some context. But generally I'm just down the middle, not vanilla... just a few standard Jazz colors... but not complicated and usually very easy to hear, and easy to play if one gets their guitar skills together. Personally the bottom is where one should be aware of and thinking or hearing.
Yea I know... and BB's use to really dig it when I played Bass, which I did for a while.
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I ask myself and the OP, is Melodic Minor a good scale for creating chords?
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Originally Posted by Reg
I presume you know about the thing where you don't harmonise a C melody with a C maj7 but with a C6? That's pretty basic, right?
There's some hand wavy reason often given involving the minor second or ninth (as if we aren't tolerant of those in other settings) but it's a manifestation of a deeper principle, that I think of as 'the primacy of the upper extensions'. People do say that the minor ninth/second in general is more dissonant than the major seventh. Maybe? But that seems simplistic to me.
Jordan/Stefon Harris understand it differently, and I prefer their way of looking at it. The C major seventh is a composite sound - a C shell voicing in the left hand supporting an E minor triadic structure in the right. The E minor triadic structure is its own tonal thing that stands separate and the C does indeed sound quite jangly over it. From a CST perspective, you could even say, the correct scale on Cmaj7 is not C ionian, but E Phrygian. (AFAIK some do indeed teach it this way.) Doing this gives you the better emphasis and also the correct avoid notes (b9 and b13 or F and C). But that's just the simplest example.
In general I would say it's a good way of understanding how the same pitch set can sound so different depending on voicing.
For some (like Jonathan Kreisberg and Ben Monder) it's a feature rather than a bug. If you play this for instance
3 x 2 4 1 x
or this
x 7 9 x 8 8
It's an interesting, and slightly weird sound. It gets used on soundtracks to suggest an unstable, Emaddb6 tonality. The Matrix comes to mind.
What it isn't is this
x 3 5 4 5 x
So, we can make an unstable 'weird' maj7 for a stable one by reversing the B and C, so starting with familiar voicings in inversion (so the inversion is unchanged)
3 3 2 4 x x --> 3 2 2 5 x x
x 7 10 x 8 7 --> x 7 9 x 8 8
x x 5 5 5 7 --> x x 5 4 5 8
and so on
TBH I can't imagine you playing these voicings haha, but they are used by some.
I guess one can do just about anything and make it work in some context. But generally I'm just down the middle, not vanilla... just a few standard Jazz colors... but not complicated and usually very easy to hear, and easy to play if one gets their guitar skills together. Personally the bottom is where one should be aware of and thinking or hearing.
Well, it's where swing guitar is tbf. Someone has to deal with the ... errr... bottom, for there to be a top to have fun with. Dear oh dear. What was I talking about again? Ah yes, nerdy harmony shit.
In any case, when Mahler writes an E on an F major he hears the yearning disonnance against the F triad, which however softly and belatedly, must be resolved. When Louis played an E on an F triad back in the 20s, he heard the primacy of the Am triad as a separate tonality supported by the F chord, but itself legitimate. That's how colouristic jazz harmony was born.
In jazz the major seventh chord is most often to used to support a seventh or third in the melody, so it's all good. You do sometimes see stuff like this:
HNNNNNGGGGGGGGG.
It hurts us!Last edited by Christian Miller; 02-27-2023 at 01:59 PM.
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BTW this is why chord subs are in my opinion a better way of working that thinking of 'upper extensions' - in theory it maybe the same thing, but in practice if I sub an Em7 on a Cmaj7 chord rather than Cmaj9 I'm giving things that right weight. Which of course is how jazz players have done it for generations.
Anyway as this is a melodic minor thread, you might think for instance a C+ triad on D7 rather than D9#11, an E triad on a C+ instead of Cmaj7#5, or a Ebmaj7#5 on Cm instead of Cm9(maj7) and so on. This is all stock stuff of course, but Stefon's insight ties it all together.
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I've been thinking the "Settled Science" was dissonance not strictly the
attribute of pitch class with respect to harmony, more a pitch position
whose analysis assumes scales are multi octave objects. The harmony
has the chord tone octave (1-8), an extension octave above (9-13), and
a sub-octave "missing bass". Lots of big chords on the guitar can span
two octaves; so it becomes important to know the context whether an
upper is the chord tones with the lower playing missing bass notes, or
if the lower has the chord tone octave and the upper is the extension.
That is from which comes some misnaming of 2/9, b5/#11, 6/13; more
importantly harmony and dissonance change with octave assignment.
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The C major seventh is a composite sound - a C shell voicing in the left hand supporting an E minor triadic structure in the right. The E minor triadic structure is its own tonal thing that stands separate and the C does indeed sound quite jangly over it. From a CST perspective, you could even say, the correct scale on Cmaj7 is not C ionian, but E Phrygian. (AFAIK some do indeed teach it this way.)
In any case, ending a tune with C6 is generally much nicer anyway, more stable. I mean, all this is fairly obvious when we actually play it so why don't we trust our ears more? I think we're afraid to mess with what's on the page.
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yea Christian... I understand where your coming from... but I still think of those issues as arranging... how one voices lead lines.
I know you've seen enough of my vids to know.. I know how to voice lead lines. I tend to see and understand using different triads as like using an extra step for teaching one how to play, standard performance technique issues for instruments.
There are many ways to accomplish the same things.... Again if it works for you, cool. I'm as I said simple... even though the results sometimes sound complicated. The complications are just a technique thing. I have very good guitar technique, which enables me to have more thoughts going on in my head while I play live. I'm not saying good or bad... just the level of performance.
Guy B ...MM is a great scale for creating and using Blue Note chords. Years ago another forum member wanted a MM chord progression...I posted a few. But I tend to use MM as a harmonic and melodic tool for creating references with common Chord Patterns. It's another tool for creating Musical organization when playing Jazz.
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Originally Posted by ragman1
in fact in the vid Stefon demonstrates that even an Eb sounds better on a Cmaj7 chord than a C (in his opinion at least with which I agree.) have a listenLast edited by Christian Miller; 02-27-2023 at 04:27 PM.
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Originally Posted by pauln
All of Me starts with a C melody over Cmaj7. When I play the B a b9 below the C as in 8x998x the melody doesn't strike as dissonant at all.
But, it does require that low C. If I play xx9988 it sounds harsher to me. The b9 interval jumps out more.
Opening a chord melody, rubato, with x 15 14 16 13 x (easier to play up there) puts the B a half step below the C. Dissonant, but not harsh to my ear.
Ergo the concept of "dissonance" strikes me as surprisingly context-sensitive. So, if I were to try to construct a personal theory (that is, what characteristics contribute to my personal sense of what is consonant, dissonant and/or harsh) it would have to include which octave for each chord tone, which melody note and which bass note. I have no idea how to codify it, but those are the concepts which inform my choice of chord.
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Originally Posted by Reg
I kind of see that as a separate thing though. If you are discussing MM for me this is colouristic harmony, not voice leading, I tend not to think of voice leading that way, and the way. tbf I’m not sure I follow you most of the time, but I remember you mentioning sort of pre baking harmonisations of the scale and applying those. In this case one would select that voicings that sound good and go from there NBD, and this sort of thing is unlikely to be a problem.
Otoh for line construction and thinking about harmony in general, the thing about Stefon and Jordan is they changed the way I hear chords. The Cmaj7 thing, kind of can’t unhear it once you start hearing it.
Problem is a lot of people play x 3 5 4 5 x or something as a default major voicing without actually hearing it or realising that not all major sounds are interchangeable. I don’t mean to be hoity toity… but urgh. I think being specific about voicings is good?
Anyway I think this approach has given me a good way to access sounds in a simple, direct and effective way.Last edited by Christian Miller; 02-27-2023 at 04:55 PM.
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
In the case of All of Me you’re dealing with a very mainstream old school tune which is sensitive to this type of thing… it’s stylistic. if it was a Wayne chart or something maybe…
I mean 8 x 9 9 8 8 is just minging (my wife described it as a bit sour, which I think is a good descriptor, less judgmental haha.)
compare to 8 x 7 7 8 8 and 8 x 9 9 8 7
you could move the first chord into either of the other two and it would sound like resolution. Try it.
if you can’t hear that internal dissonance, have a watch of that stefon harris video.
But, it does require that low C. If I play xx9988 it sounds harsher to me. The b9 interval jumps out more.
.Last edited by Christian Miller; 02-27-2023 at 05:05 PM.
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
Well we could start posting examples of how to comp through different tunes. Maybe pick 10 or so, some different styles... or 20... I don't need to rehears... maybe even play a few same tunes in different styles which would show how styles change chords and the actual chord pattern we play.
I've been trying to do this anyway...how does one get things done... deadlines LOL I'm thinking this would be much easier to see and hear for most.
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I'm thinking we could have whom ever wants to, also post comping examples... we can all pick up some tricks of other players bag... maybe even some of those swing is a feel guys
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
I like All of Me fine with a Cmaj7 as the first chord. I've been playing it that way since before the Real Book. Iirc, my first teacher had me alternating Cmaj7 to C6 at the beginning of All of Me. I believe that was a common movement in the big band era --- because my teacher, who was one of those guys in the 30s and 40s, used it all the time.
But, not with a C on the high E string.
It sounds better to me if I sing the C, or if another instrument plays it.
Did I mention that timbre seems to matter too?
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
in fact in the vid Stefon demonstrates that even an Eb sounds better on a Cmaj7 chord than a C (in his opinion at least with which I agree.) have a listen
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Originally Posted by rpjazzguitar
Even though unresolved maj7 were rare in accompaniment they weren’t rare in solo lines and melodies. The melody of Struttin with some Barbeque (L’il Hardin) for instance leans on the maj7 over the major backing in a way you wouldn’t hear in a classical melody. That was in I want to say 1926, so jazzers have been doing this a while.
But, not with a C on the high E string.
It sounds better to me if I sing the C, or if another instrument plays it.
Did I mention that timbre seems to matter too?
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Originally Posted by ragman1
I don't have to listen. An Eb sounds good on a CM7 because it's the b3. Nice minor/major/alt sound like the blues. No prob there although it ought to resolve one way or the other, not just hang.Last edited by Christian Miller; 02-28-2023 at 05:16 AM.
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Originally Posted by Reg
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Originally Posted by Christian Miller
In any case, all the examples I've been thinking of are ENDING with a C, not starting with one. And I've changed my mind, they all sound pretty good to me.
As for the Eb, he resolved it to E natural. Well, of course he did.
Can I be honest? I don't want to sound superior or anything but this is just real beginner stuff. We're making it sound so important but it's not. If it sounds okay, it's okay. But if the players have no ear or natural ability what can you do?
I can't believe that this is supposed to be a masterclass. Masterclass means advanced, right? He asks them what they'd play over a CM7 chord and there's a horrible silence. Eventually a small voice says nervously 'C major scale?'. This was a masterclass?
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