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Re: Chord progressions, Multi Lateral Improvisation (looping) (MilesDavis, Bitches Brew)
Not bad for a drummer !!
respect
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Claude
Rick Walker a écrit :
> 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
>
>