F to D# is an augmented sixth. Bach did German sixth at least. Notorious Tristan chord, F B D# with appoggiatura G# into A, shocking #9 there (or sounds like Fm7b5, ie., Ab then the A into A#, #11 on E7 before finally coming) except Chopin done it 20 yrs earlier (1839, op.28 no.2).Gamma-UT wrote:MadBrain wrote:- E Phrygian: This one lets you use not only 1, but 2 different dominants! [...]
B7b5 [= F7b5]
I think the reason why it's not used in classical music that much at all is just that it doesn't fit stylistically (and is intrinsically somewhat dissonant).
The reason, though, that it's thought of as 'French 6th', F A B D#, is to do with voice-leading. F-D# (s'posed to go) to E-E (but goes E-D, so people find the proto V7b5 substitute herein):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristan_chord
Nota Bene^Gamma-UT wrote: Focusing on building harmony horizontally through voice leading rather than applying chords to a melody is also more likely to maintain the illusion of a mode rather than tonality.
I don't know what happened over 'this chord' as appears in these sentences.Gamma-UT wrote:When talking about soloing over a chord, this is pretty much what happens. It's a scale derived from a mode – I don't think most people are making stronger claims than this unless they are going for a modal feel over the entire song.MadBrain wrote: I'm starting to think that the best way [...] is to call them what they are when doing that: scales.
[...] you get "I played over this chord in the G Mix mode" and not "I played over this chord using notes from the scale derived from the G Mix mode".
I call myself a modal player soloing as I'm not interested much in chords (which does not seem all that extraordinary to me).
I did Bb to Ab vamp in Stranger 'n' [5] and that's certainment Bb Mixolydian soloing/melody. That's all I got, except:
I would say that Satie Gnossienne #1 - C harmonic minor over F tonic, F minor key sig - is modal. 4th mode of C harmonic minor: F G Ab B C D Eb. (It goes to iv and comes back.) 2nd part he does 4th mode of C melodic minor, yer jazz minor rightchere.
(I would even say that's prophetic like his planed mixed quartal stacks in Le fils etoiles act I is.)
But I'm following ICM, it's melody instrument + drums... it's static, it don't go nowhere.
I'll decide on eg., 1 #2 3 #4 5 -7 and go to town. And I did do 'independent bass lines' with that one, as well as unison on the main motif.
I did my take on Marwa and I bet ya I lived in that world for a minute.
I think modes on the for real side are more 'modern' than a whole buncha chords (and do confer Miles you don't want to end up a hip cornball). But that's an Aesthetics discussion, isn't it.
