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#21 | |
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ss.org Regular
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Leeds UK
Posts: 265
Main Seven: Ibanez RG1527
Rig: XT -> Marshall 20/20
Thanked: 3
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Hungarian minor is worth learning though- it makes far more musical sense to me than major (and most other scales too) because it has so much symmetry, there is only a handful of different shapes per string involved (3 notes per string) and they just repeat over and over so if you think vertically as well as horizontally, it's almost impossible to get lost. It also fits with so many other scales, when you view things chromatically, the Hungarian seems to make far more sense than the major scale as it contains so many triads. Personally, I also find the modes are more individual- the colour is there in each major mode, but to me, the hungarian modes have a more recognisable individual colour and that inspires me when I write riffs and solos etc. I think it's my most used scale ![]() I had the same thing with teachers though- my last teacher was an amazing musician, his classical, metal and fusion/jazz stuff was all amazing, but he quite often assumed a bit too much of me and it was just too much information in one go. I have to find a lot of the stuff on my own, then realise I was told it 6 months ago, but it doesn't mean anything until I have a way to make it real in my own head.
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#22 |
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Hard-On For Freedom
![]() Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: San Antonio, TX, USA
Posts: 2,540
Thanked: 18
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That's also why I have the easiest time using diminished fragments between major and melodic minor modes. Diminished is perfectly symmetrical and it's impossible to get lost if you can find so much as one of the 'root' notes and orient yourself around it.
I also view three- and four-note chords easier in terms of diminished chords being raised one way or another, rather than a major or a minor being changed - for example, a dominant 7 being a diminished chord with one note lowered to the root. When I view scales I find it easier to swallow six-note 'clusters' rather than the whole 3NPS position. If I just remember the first six notes of every mode, and then on the 'seventh note' I just go to the first six notes of the next lowest mode, I'm memorizing and planning a lot less. That can be applied to any scale that can be made conveniently into a 3NPS scale, and it's helped me out quite a lot. Jeff |
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#23 |
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ss.org Regular
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Leeds UK
Posts: 265
Main Seven: Ibanez RG1527
Rig: XT -> Marshall 20/20
Thanked: 3
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The lack of tonality in diminished can be really useful- as it doesn't have any real tonal centre, it can be used to modulate from more or less anywhere to anywhere else. I find it kind of 'resets' the pallet- how ever strong the tonality of your starting mode, chuck in some diminished runs and I tend to forget and tonality of where I was before. One of my favourite patterns is ascending 3 notes per string, major or minor diminished 1, 3, dim5, on each string, descending across the strings (e.g. starting 12th fret on e, e, major or minor 3 major being my favourite, then dim5, then on the 2nd string, taking Bb 11th fret as the root, then maj/min 3 and so on). Octave displacement can give a similar effect, something I pinched from the Buckethead instructional video on You Tube, I like the sound of 1, #8, natural 2nd, b8, then make nat 2nd the root and repeat up to where ever I want to be.
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#24 | |
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8-0ctaves
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: CA&HI
Posts: 322
Main Seven: 1987 Tobias 7-string bass & 8 octave Adler 12
Rig: Basson B310SC
Thanked: 6
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Quote:
My perspective: A G13(b9) or any 13(b9 ) is a member of the V13 chord family. This family includes G7(b9) , G7(+9) G7(b9+9), G7(+11,b9), G11(b9) , G7(+11,+9), G11(+9,b9) and a few more. It is associated with the natural 11 forms of the chord. If the chord is G13(b9) ,you can use F melodic minor. You don't wany the dominant 8 note scale(1/2-1-1/2-1 etc.). Here is why- The chord is spelled G (b) D F Ab C and E. Rearrange these note horizontally and you get F G Ab C D E (b is usually omitted because the B and c form a minor ninth interval and can sound bad). The Bb would be added for a +9 such as G13(b9+9). So use a melodic minor starting on the note a whole step below the root of the chord. D13(b9) would use C melodic minor. The minor 7,flat 5 chord such as Ami7(b5) is also called a "half diminished" chord. It is it's own chord family. Ami11(b5), Ami9 (b5) etc. Some scale sources for this chord are C melocic minor, Bb major scale, A locrian and G harmonic minor. A good way to figure this out is to spell the chord, like A C Eb G B, whichich is A mi 9(b5). Then check those notes against scale tones. C (d) Eb (f) G A B C or C melodic minor scale. When the 4th or sus is added, in this case a D, the scale still works. I hope this helps |
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