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Old 06-18-2007, 09:18 AM   #17
distressed_romeo
I R not Chthulu...
 
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Join Date: May 2005
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Main Seven: C7 Hellraiser
Main ERG: Aria bass tuned in fifths
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distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.distressed_romeo can play Erotomania with his toes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cvinos View Post
IIm7(9) V7(13) Imaj7 VI7(b13) is a basic and nice one.

Also try to combine different voicings of the chords.

Note the dominant at VI instead of a VIm7 that
the major scale (based at the I) would provide.
This way, when repeating the sequence, it gravitates
back to the II much stronger.


Also, when you have any progression, try some ruled
reharmonization, tritone substitution for dominants
for example, to explore other variants.
IIm7(9) bII7(#9) Imaj7 bIII7(9)

Or throw in an extra dominant at the
perfect fifth of the following chord.
IIm7 V7 Imaj7 III7 VI7
Here it could be quite usual to play the first three chords
for half a bar each, and the last two for a quarter, to get
an even number of bars and keep the harmonic flow in line.

Another way to change a progression is to replace
a chord by another one that is in the same "group"
(I don't know the correct English expression for this),
the possible groups here being the tonic, the sub-dominant
or the dominant-like chords. This is when relating to an
underlying scale. For example for a major scale, the chords
in the tonic-like-group are Imaj7, IIIm7 and VIm7.
So you could try to use those interchangeably.

Well, these are of course just a few possibilities,
shortly mentioned, that occur in standards.
I think those are worth to give a try and
play a bit with basic progressions.
Cheers man! E-rep for you! This is exactly the sort of stuff I'm exploring at the moment...

Dreaming in infared...

http://farsideguitars.blogspot.com/
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