Quote:
Originally Posted by bonsy
Thanks, I just found it a bit confusing to have 7 modes from the one scale ie in Cmajor all the same notes in the 7 modes. I wondered how to pin point the mode being used. thanks again.
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You may already know this ---- from the above, not sure. Just in case......
I think that relative modes confuse a lot of us. When I first got into modes I could see no need for them as I could not hear anything more than an octave "thing" being different between Ionian or Phrygian. Course I did not understand the difference came from the chord tones playing under the modal notes. No one was in my room playing chords while I played modal notes so I only heard 1/2 the story.
Then I found paralell modes. The key stays the same and the notes change. Now that makes since - to me - and I do hear the difference and find it quite easy to incorporate into my playing.
The major modes - using the paralell concept:
Ionian has these notes of the major scale: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Lydian has these notes of the major scale: 1, 2, 3,
#4, 5, 6, 7 - one different
Mixolydian has these notes...................... 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
b7 - one different
The minor modes - using the paralell concept:
Aeolian has these notes of the
major scale 1, 2, b3, 4, 5, b6, b7
Dorian has these notes of the major scale 1, 2, b3, 4, 5,
6, b7 - one different
Phrygian has these notes of the major scale 1,
b2, b3, 4, 5, b6, b7 - one different
Locrian has these notes of the major scale 1, b2, b3, 4,
b5, b6, b7. - one different
Back to our answers earlier; the song is not going to change keys for the mode it stays in the key the song is written in and if it (the song) needs a modal feel the standard notation just tells you to flat the 7th or sharp the 4th what ever. Relative modes are easy to teach - just start on a new note - and you too have learned modes, but, very confusing when you try to incorporate (use)
relative modes into an actual songs. Easy to run up and down the fretboard, but, hard to work into a piece of sheet music.
Two home bases Ionian for major modes and Aeolian for minor modes. From that change one note. If you want the Lydian feel; sharp the 4th. If you want the mixolydian feel; flat the 7th. That's easy and can flow right into my improvisation with out a lot of hoopla.
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Relative modes
C Ionian C D E G G A B C
D Dorian...D E F G A B C D
E Phrygian.. E F G A B C D E
D scale is D E F# G A B C# D
In the above Dorian would be 1, 2, b3, 4, 5, 6, b7 so....
Flat the 3rd and the 7th what do you get?
.............D E F G A B C D -- relative mode D Dorian.
E Scale is E F#, G# A B C# D# E
In the above Phrygian is 1, b2, b3, 4, 5, b6, b7 so....
flat the 2, 3, 6 and 7 what do you get?
.............E F G A B C D E -- relative mode E Phrygian.
So ..... relative modes walk the key and keep the same notes.
Paralell modes keep the key and change the notes. Both end up with the same thing. Use which ever one you like best
Reason for all this, I thought you still may be thinking relative modes, our answers dealt more with paralell modes. I thought you might find this useful.
As Millertime said standard notation is not going to outline what mode is being used, however, you can determine this by the notes and chords used.
Hope this was not redundant, i.e. you can use it.