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Chord progressions, Multi Lateral Improvisation (looping) (Miles Davis, Bitches Brew)
Per wrote:
"With the modern looping
gear this has not to be, since loops can be instantly changed to
evolve and also "pitched" on-the-fly into any chord progression. In
essence the "background" chord structure can be instantly improvised
as well as melody lines."
I've thought about this a lot in my own music, too, Per.
The reason why modality is a good analogy to repitching melodic loops on
the
fly is that the intervallic relationships between the notes of the loop
still remain identical when we pitch a loop differently (of course, this
can
change to with the judicious use of pitch shifting on just parts of the
loop as one copies it to a new loop..........but, still it's very
difficult
to pull off.
This produces a kind of 'virtual' modality if you don't mind the term.
In other words, you are left with a new harmony (or implied harmonic
relationship
to the original loop). Every note in the loop pitches to the same
intervallic modulation
which , of course, will cause new dissonances to occur as a matter of
course.
This can produce really interesting results, resulting in suspended
harmonies or chordal alterations.
But there is still a kind of stasis about it...............albeit a more
complex stasis, because
the relationship of the new loop to the original loop is parallel,
harmonically, even if it forces a new
harmony by the juxtaposition. Does this make sense?
I like it personally, and , to be truthful, it's forcing me to learn a
lot
more about complex
modern theory than I knew before I first started looping bass lines and
percussion in my early days.
Per wrote:
"In my praxis I prefer to call this Multi
Lateral Improvisation. And I predict a revival for chord analysis
based improvisation!"
Yes!!!! Exactly.
You know, this same thing is happening with a new instrument that I"m in
love with:
I signed an endorsment with a company that makes a very simple
instrument
called a strumstick.
It is like a skinny walking dulcimer with only three strings and an Ionian
intevallic setup that allows for
either a flat 7 or a natural 7.
This instrument was designed to allow anyone to play simple diatonic major
scale songs around a campfire without
knowing anything about scales, really. You just strum and play melodies
on the upper string where there are no 'wrong' notes.
I'm loving this limitation because if I force the instrument into a I, V,
ii tuning
then my upper string is constrained to a Lydian scale with really nice
9th
chords (that are ambiguous because they have no 3rd in them)
I've been trying out different capo settings on each of them with I, V, I
tunings (all the greek modes) I, V, ii I, V, bvii
etc. and it forces all these beautiful (and frequently suspended or
dissonant) triadic chord progressions.
It's just soo fun and cool sounding. I have three diatonic ones in
different tunings and I just got a large chromatic one so I can play
anything on it (especially with a pinky slide on the upper string).
What's wonderful about it, is that I can hear things I really love for
composition.................and then I analyze them after the fact, so
my harmonic knowledge is expanding rapidly.....................and yet,
they
are as minimal as minimal can be.................my idea of
a multi-instrumentlists' good time...............lol