![]() ![]() Jens' lesson however is about making your choice on any particular chord 'propel' you to the next chord. This is absolutely fine and will sound nice and useable, no worries. So if you play D melodic minor over the A7 you will be 'brushing past' the 9th on your lines. Compared to the chord we are 'outlining', A7, this is a 9th. ![]() D melodic minor's raised (or natural) 6th degree is a B. This fits the A7 chord nicely and then on the second measure you can shift to D dorian ready for the ii V I. ![]() It's absolutely true that you could use D melodic minor. Jens Larsen has some great videos, I think that in this case he didn't have time for a comprehensive answer to your question, and instead opted to justify why he made the choice in his video to play it as D Harmonic Minor rather than D melodic minor, given that in the video he is really trying to emphasise how he's trying to create lines that really emphasise the movement from chord to chord. Note that signals that the progression moves to the subdominant is aĬould someone explain why my reasoning is flawed and what it means for a note to signal a progression to move and why in this case the Bb would do that? Harmonic minor and in the context, Dm7 is a subdominant chord, and the No, mainly because the sound of a dominant in minor is usually from I asked the creator of the video if we could use D Melodic Minor, and got this responce: So would we could improvise with D Melodic Minor over the A7Īfter watching the video they decide to use a D Harmonic Minor which uses the tones: Modifying that to match with the A7 we can raise the C to a C#, to getĭ E F G A B C#, which is D Melodic minor. Include notes from the D Dorian scale, because this one only contains When we are going to improvise on top of the A7 - we would like to We are playing in C major so our main notes would be: I took some time to think of what scale I could use to improvise over it, here was my thought process: They play a secondary dominant for the II chord, so they are playing an A7 chord. Recently I watched this video which discusses secondary dominants and specifically for the case of A II - V - I in the key of C. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |