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Soloing on Scales and Modes

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

1.  Making sense of major and minor scales

2.  Get acquainted with the 7 different modes

3. Work with pentatonic scales

4. Use scales and modes within a solo

5. Improvise on scales and modes

In the earlier sections, yo learned how to create solos based on the notes of a sno’gs chods.

Playing only chord tones can be somewhat limiting and in the wrong hands, can result in solos that sound more or less like arp exercises.

If you were to open up yur improv, you need to go beyond this chord based approach to embrace entie scales.

Key to playing scaled based solos: know your sales.

All of them.

Backward and forward and inside out.

Know which scales to play against which chords.

This section provides an intro to basic scale theory — how to construct the most common scales and use these scales to create great sounding solos.

Improvising on chords

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

You have to know how chords are constructed in order to solo over a chord progression.

1.   Arpeggiating the chord.

Work with the notes of the c hord in order, either top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top.

Play arpeggios!

You can build improvisations by arpeggiating the notes of the underlying chords.

eg.

C:  1  3  5  8 1  3 5

Dm:  1  3   5  8 1   3 5

Am:  1  3  5   8 1  3 5

G:  1  3   5   8 1   3 5

This technique works best when there are a lot of rapid chord progressions in a song.

If you find yourself sitting on the same chord for several meeasures, you are going to get tired of playing that same arp over and over.

Of course, your solo can become more sophisticated when the chords are more complex. That’s why a lot of jazz music uses extended chords. When yo have more notes in the chord to work with, you can do more in your solos.

For eg.

CM7:  1  3 5  7 8   7  5

Am7:  1  3 5  7 8   7  5

FM7:  8  7  5  3 1  7  5   7

G7:  1  3  5  7 8    –

Tip:  You can add needed variety to an arpeggiated solo by altering the rhythm of the notes. That is, don’t play straight 8ths; make some notes  shorter and some longer and add some synocapation to make things more interesting.


2.  Inverting the chord

Need to learn all the inversions of a chord.

When you invert a chord, you give yourself more melodic variety when you solo.

If you see a CMaj7: don’t have to play  C  E  G  B  one after another.

Instead, you can play 1st inversion arp: E G B C

2nd inversion:  G B C E

3rd inversion:  B C E G

For eg:

CM7:  5  7  8  3 7   8  3  5

FM7:  3  5  7  8 5  7  8  3

Dm7:  1  3   5  7 7  1  3  5

G7:   3  5  7  8 1  3 5  –

3.  Arpeggiating around the melody

Play arpegiios centered on the main notes of the melody.

Start by identifying the key tones of the melody, typically by eliminating passing tones and other ornamentations.

These key tones should be part of the underlying chod.

You can then play an arpeggio of that chord, starting on the melody note and moving down and back up the other chord tones.

Use 16th notes are arpeggiate around the chord.

4.  Changing the Order

AT this level, you aren ot limited to pure up and down arp.

You will use all the notes of the chord.

You play them in whatever order you want.

C Maj 7 — 4 notes to work with: C E G B

Play these notes in any order:

C E G B

C G B E

C B E G

B C G E

or any combination.

Don’t limit yourself in strict arpeggios.

use whatever combinations work best for you.

By mixing up the order of the ntoes, your solo will sound more spontaneous and less like you’re practicing arpeggios.

When you combine this non-arp approach with a little rhythmic variation, you can create some very advanced sounding solos like the one here:

C:  8  3  5  1 3  5 1  –

Em7:  5 7 3 1 5  7 1

Am7:  5  8  7  3 7 3 5  –

G7:   7  5  8  3 1     –


5.  Using only selected chord tones

Don’t use all the notes in the chord.

You can skip around through any or all of the chord tones, in whatever order makes sense melodically.

Think of it this way.

Each note of a chord is like a club in your golf bag.

Pick and choose which clubs you want to use in a given situation.

Work with a C Maj 7 chord. Use C E G B

  • You might choose only play  E G and B
  • or just B C and E
  • or just B and C
  • maybe repeat E several times and never play the C
  • maybe use all 4 notes.
  • it’s your choice.

When you reach this leve, you are really utilizing a song’s chord to their fullest extent.

The notes of a chord are just suggestions.

You can choose to use a particular note or not to use it.

Notes can go in any order, backward or forward or even not be played at all.

Just cuz you see C7 chord doesn’t mean you actually have to play the C

The C note is there if you want to use it but how you use it if at all is entirely up to you.

6.  Choosing Key Chord Tones

If you pick and choose which notes of a chord to use, how do you know which are the most imp chord tones?

It’s going to differ from song to song.

Root: — at the end of a phrase, it’s hard to beat the finality of a chord’s root note.

Root note plays an important role in teh harmony throughout the song as well and is always good when you need to release any tension you build in solo.

Third — the 3rd of the chord defines its harmonic nature (major or minor) emphasziing the 3rd during a solo hleps the empahsize the uynderlying harmony of a song.

3rd is particularly powerful when moving from a major to a minor chord. or vice versa.

Playing the 3rd as part of your solo reinforces the major to minor change.

Extended Notes — you can create a very sophisticated melody by emphasizing the extended notes of a chord, in particular 7ths and 9ths.

6ths and 11ths are also good if you want to go there.

A solo based in these upper extremities of a song’s harmony can sound light and airy, and is particularly effective in jazz or a jazz rock.

CM9:  9  7  9  8 7  –

Dm9: 7  5  7  8 9  –

Am9:    7  8 9     7     5  3

G9:  3  1 7  9  –


Third and 7th of the Dom 7:  Here is something you definitely need to know.

in a dom 7 chord, the most imp tones aren’t the R or the 5th but 3rd and b7

This is the key to make a good solo.

In a dom 7 — esp one based on the 5th of the scale, the 3rd and 7ths are notes you want to empahsize.

That’s cuz these notes are leading tones that drive you right back to the ky tones of the tonic chord which follow.

For eg.

In key of C, the Dom7 based on the 5th tone of the scale is:  G7 chord:  G B D F

  • the 3rd B, is a leading tone that leads up a half step to C, the root of the tonic, C major chord.
  • the 7th of the G7 chord, F, is a note that leads a 1/2 step down to E — the third of the tonic.
  • They are powerful notes, particularly if you use them to lead to the natural following notes.

Here’s something else about the 2 notes:

— played together, they form an interval known as tritone.

If you know anything about music tehory, tritone is very sinister sounding interval, sometimes called the devil’s interval.

It’s an interval that is filled with tnsion.

As you learn to introduce the concept of tension and release into your improvisation, you will find that these 2 notes particularly useful to set up the tension leading into the release at the end of your phrase.

Emphasize the 3rd and 7th notes of a dominant 7 chord — which lead to the R and 3 of the following tonic chord.

A leading tone is a chord tone that is half step away from a tone in the following chord. Leading tones are typically found in chord based on the 5th or dominant, of the scale, that are followed by chords based on the tonic of the scale.  V7 to I.

Melody notes — while you are focusing on the song’s chords, do not forget the melody.Foc your chord based solo on thekey tones of the song’s melody line, just use the melody as a jumping off oint for the chord tones that you play.


7.  Utilizing non-chord tones.

As much variety as you can achieve by improvising on the notes of a song’s chord progression, if your solo consists solely of chord tones, it can get a little boring. That’s why you want to introduce non-chord tones, as appropriate, into your solos.

The easiest non-chord tones to add are passing tones and approach notes.

  • use passing tones to bridge the gap between 2 chord tones
  • Use approach notes to led into key chord tones

Remember that these non-chord tones are subsidiary to the notes contained in the chords; they are embellishments to the chord-based melody, not key tones in and of themselves.

1. harmony — playing in parallel

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

How do you create a harmony line?

Simplest way: sing or play a specific interal aove each of the original notes of themelody.

Most common type of  parallel harmony is played a third above the original notes while staying within the existing key.

–this means the notes you play will be either a minor 3rd or a major 3rd above the original notes.

Tip: to train your ears to hear natural harmony lines, the best approach is simply to listen to — and sing along with — songs that employh close 2-part vocal harmonies. Early Beatles tunes and Simon and Garfunkel…. good.

Why play a 3rd above the melody and not a 4th or a 5th or a 6th or a 2nd or 7th?

There’s nothing stoppign you from harmonizing on these other intervals but the 3rd-based harmony tends to present fewer problems than using other intervals.  The reasons are:

1. close harmony tends to have a more plasing sound than harmony notes spaced farther apart. You don’t want to play a harmony line a 2nd above the melody as that is too close, creating a dissonant sound.  The 3rd is the ideal close harmony interval.

2. you want the main notes in your harmony line to fallwithin the underlying chords.

Chords are composed of 3 notes stacked a 3rd above each other: R, 3, 5

When you play or sing  a harmony part a 3rd above a given melody note, chances are that note will be one of these 3 chord notes. Another interval could fall within the chord but the 3rd is more likely to.  For that matte,r playing a 3rd below the melody line is also likely to fall within the chord struture, and is also acceptable harmony.

3. the next most likely interval to fall within the chord structure is the 5th. Problem with playing 5th-based harmony is that it is reather primitive sounding. Traditional music tells us to avoid parallel 5ths whenever possible. While this is often ignored in popular music, it’s still not the ideal interval to maintain for a 2-part harmonyh.

4.  otherintervals — 6th, 7th, 9th and so on — tend to fall outside the basic 3-note chod, more ofthen than not, and create extended chrods with more complex harmonic strucures. That doesn’t make this type of harmony wrong, ust more musically sophisticated. It’s also harder to hear and for vodalists to sing.

For all these reasons, it’s best to start playing harmony using 3rds and explore more complex intervals only as you become more exp in the art.

Playing in Harmony

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

1.  Create a parallel harmony line

2.  Avoide problems with parallel harmony solo

3. Blend harmony with the original melody

4. Create alternate melodic lines

Here you learn how to create solos by playing or singing in harmony with the original melody.

This technique requires good ear more than the technique of rhythmic variation and melodic embellishments.

You also need some basic understanding of music tehory.

Your ear nees to hear harmony parts, such that you know which notes are contained in various chords.

Thrust of this section: to create a melody line that is parallel to the song’s original melody.

It’s like taking a background vocal line and making that line the lead

It sounds a bit like the original melody but it is different enough to stnd alone as a solo

Summary — solo varying rhythm

Friday, April 17th, 2009
  1. Vary the rhythm of a melody lets you create something new that still sounds familiar to the audience.
  2. If melody is rhythmically complex, you can simplify the rhythm by focusing on key tones or by smoothing out syncopation.
  3. Simple rhythms can be made more angular by adding syncopation
  4. you can back phrase a melody by starting it later than expected — or front phrase a melody by jumping the first note
  5. Long notes can be made less boring by substituting shorter repeated notes
  6. a more elaborate way to vary the rhythm is to use the same notes of the melody to create new rhythmic patterns.

6. solo — creating new rhythmic patterns

Friday, April 17th, 2009

the key: to change the rhythm of the melody without changing any of  the pitches , and without adding or subtracting notes.

It’s more than just syncopation, it is creating entirely new rhythmic patterns.

–can make five 8th notes to play 16ths, syncopated, etc.

–you can create completely new melodies by changing all the rhythm around; make sure you end up where you are supposed to when you are done.

Solo — varying rhythm

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Easiest way of solo: build on the song’s existing melody.

Use different ways to elaborate on a melody.

play around with the melody’s rhythm.

Why do you want to vary the original rhythm?

and not the pitches?

–when you take liberty with the rhythm, you play the melody either looser or straighter.

— you can make it swing, or make it funky or make it jump and pop

— you do all this without changing the basic melodic shape; leave the pitches alone so that the listener still recognizes the melody even as you are varying the rhythmic components

–make something different out of something familiar

Varying the rhythm:

–let you put your personal stamp on the melody

–it is a stylistic thing

–you can speed up or slow down the melody, hold it back for dramatic effect or rush it forward to increase the excitement level

–it’s your solo so the melody is entirely in your hands

–use rhythmic variation to make the melody yours.

6 different ways to vary the rhythm of a melody:

1. simplify it

2. syncopate it

3. employ back phrasing and front phrasing

4. add notes

5. create entirely new rhythmic patterns

Key: to do all these things while still letting the original melody shine through.

Different solos

Friday, April 17th, 2009

Different solo forms

1. Stating the melody

It has nothing to do with improvisation. State the melody of a song note for note as it is written.

2.  Solo behind the melody

IT takes the background, behind the melody.

A good lead line helps to fill in the gaps behind the vocalist without overshadowing the vocal performance.

This type of solo is more felt than heard.  It provides counterpoint to a melodic line.

It’s not a traditional accompaniment, not a series of chords or arpeggios

it’s also improvised on the spot just as you would on any other solo

You typically hear this tpe of solo at the end of melodic phrases or played softly behind a melody or even snaking it s way around the notes in the melody like a kind of counter point.

3.  Trading fours

  • this one alternates 4-bar phrases
  • two soloists take turns
  • you are required to improvise in short bursts; don’t have to come up with long, through composed melodies.

4.  Taking a verse

  • this is traditional improvised solor form where you play over a et of chod changes
  • the solo lass at least an entire verse or chorus
  • you can choose to build your solo on the melody or start from scratch  by improvising over the underlying chord changes
  • you can stay as close to the melody as you want or go outside as the music warrants

5.  Cadenzas

  • not fequentely encountered; very special
  • true solo solo
  • make up anything you want
  • showcase


Different approaches:

1. interpret the melody

  • this is easiest to learn
  • you take on the song’s existing melody
  • you don’t have to improvise a thing
  • all you do is to play the melody in your own interp
  • just play the melody, relatively straight and with feeling and bring it all home.

2. embellish the melody

  • instead of playing the melody straight, add a few flourishes here and there t make things interesting
  • this might vary the rhythm, or embellish the melodic line, or play a melodic line related but not identical to the original melody.

3.  Riffing

  • very common approach to solo; fancy licks to solo; as fast as you can and as frivilous and letting it rip to end a long solo

4.  scale based horizontal improvisation

  • improvising is composing a melody on the spot
  • one way is to improvise a melody is to base your solo linen the notes of the underlying scale
  • it is horizontal as it ascend or descend scale
  • it is linear in its approach
  • moving either stepwise or in larger intervals.

5.  Chord-based (vertical) improvisation

  • vertical improv is based on the notes of the music underlying chords
  • scale flows horizontally, a chord is built vertically
  • it is like playing arpeggios
  • it tends t  move in larger intervals than a scale-based solo and consequently tends toward more disjointed melodic and rhythmic lines

    6.  Through form (melodic) improvisation

    • the ultimate goal is to create a solo based on flowing melodic phrases
    • you don’t think in terms of riffs, or scales or chords
    • instead you think in terms of an entire multiple measure melody
    • think like a composer, construct melody in phrases
    • it takes a lot of practice to develop this type of melodic improvisation.
    • you create melody on the fly
    • you have to think in terms of long phrases, learn how to build and release tension over an extended number of measures
    • the best melodic solos use a series of motifs and variations, which requires a bit of planning before hand, the ability to think on your feet and build a musical structure on the fly

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    Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

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