QUOTE
D- The Dmaj chord has D, F#, A So we can use D Ionian, B Aeolian (of course you can use E Dorian, F# Phrygian, G Lydian, A Mixolydian, and C# Locrian too, but we haven’t talked about that yet)
Technically you are correct here Jer, but just think of all of these as either D Ionian. For our collab though, I want you to stick to D Lydian. Remember that modes mean nothing without chords associated with them. So for D major although you could say you are playing F# phrygian, and technically you would be correct, since you aren't soloing over and F# minor chord it won't sound like F# Phrygian, it will sound like D Lydian, at least in our case.
Same thing holds true for E major.
Good job.
QUOTE
D Ionian equates to these pentatonic scales. D pentatonic, G pentatonic, A pentatonic, Bmin pentatonic.
E Ionian equates to these pentatonic scales. E pentatonic, A pentatonic, B pentatonic, C#min pentatonic.
I want your brain to see a D Major chord and think---D major pentatonic, D lydian, D mixolydian and D Ionian.
Don't make it too complicated.
QUOTE
D - Any of the Dmaj or Bmin triads. Also Gmaj and Amaj triads will work too.
E – Any of the Emaj or C#min triads. Also Amaj and Bmaj triads will work too.
Same thing...I want you to see a D major chord and think:
D major=D-F#-A
If I play a D major triad over it, it will sound like D major.
If I play and F# minor triad over it it will sound like D maj7 because you hear the D major chord and the F# minor chord so you hear D-F#-A-C#=D maj7
If I play an A major triad over it it will sound like D maj9. Same reasoning.
Think of E major the same way.
Don't over think, try and keep it simple for now and in the context of D lydian for our collab. We can get all crazy down the road.
You are at GuitarMasterClass.net
Don't miss today's
free lick. Plus all our lessons are packed with
free content!
This post has been edited by lcsdds: Mar 4 2009, 07:17 PM