No offense meant, but this is more or less precisely one of the things why modes are so widely misunderstood these days.fmr wrote: When using modes (the old modes), I tend to think of music just melodically, and filling it with plain chords, like pedal notes.
It seems to be either the classical approach *or* the jazzy approach, the latter making us think of works along the lines of Davis' "Sketches Of Spain" or some whatever-sounding fusion music.
IMHO they do. Sometimes even very well. In fact, often there's close to no difference to whatever traditional harmonic approach. In other words: You have a chord progression belonging to one key and fill it up with whatever harmony and melody.I think functional harmony and modes do not fit well.
An example: One of the most traditional chord progressions in both classical and folk, country or whatever music styles might be I-IV-V(-I). Like C, F, G.
Now, regardless of some different voicing (and voice leading) rules, what else does the classical composer do than to fill that progression up with melodies and chords? Right, nothing (let's npt talk about using secondary dominants, nifty passing notes and whatever right now - they do exist in just about any musical style anyway).
Ok, then let's think about some more "modern" (in fact, it's not really modern at all) progression, such as Amin7 - D7. Theoreticaly, this would be a II-V progression in G major. But, does it really sound like that? No way. Listen to a tune such as "Oye Como Va" from Santana. Does it sound like being in G major for you? Never ever.
That's one possibly hundreds of examples of how a mode can sorta "take over" and live on its own, even inside a progression that'd otherwise belong to a different tonic chord.
Now, this doesn't have exactly to do with the original question, but as I said in my previous post, if you kinda see modes of being able to live a life on their own, you may as well use a V chord that is not a dom7 one.
I don't think it's git anything to do with jazz or not jazz. I fact, I think that modes as a separate entity have even more importance in whatever sorts of soul, funk, pop and rock music than they ever had in jazz (which I think is a lot more traditional by any functional means).But I know jazzy people work with modes as kind of subscales for the major and minor
Cheers
Sascha