Nicely put! I was thinking that beyond its contemporary nature you definitely hear tonalities from more classical eras, almost like a ghosty Bach-Mozart hybrid.
I watched three of your videos last night and then spent 9 hours behind my piano playing until 8 in the morning. after watching this I have a feeling tonight will be the same.
Just wondering. Have you had many sleepless nights since last year, and did your playing improve ? If you don't mind me asking, is there anything in particular you may have focused on ? I'm starting over on keys so...it's been a while. Peace.
This video and scale opened by mind to new musical possibilities. I play jazz and black metal and this scale gives you the feel like you are in a dream from which you cant wake up. Thanks Rick!
It is refreshing to see your comment "I play jazz and black metal." I am metal through and through, and my searching through theory was always for the scales that can instill terror, darkness, unsettling feelings of woe that is black metal. Perhaps that is how I find myself at 36 newly discovering modal options. Thanks for the great comment and thank you, Rick!!! \m/
Wow, what a beautiful composition! Lydian #9 has always been "one of those other scales in harmonic minor other than harmonic minor or phrygian dominant" that I've mapped out but never really tried in a musical context. Thank you for taking the time to explore it, share it, and then put it into a practical shape. Never realized how beautiful a scale it was, and I'm a huge lydian user. There's something magical in music itself, being that there's always some surprise waiting to be discovered.
I haven't tickled the ivories in almost 30 yrs, having focused mostly on guitar/bass/drums. Rick's lessons did me in, I'm getting a MIDI keyboard and anticipate long hours of study just around the corner. Here we go again, this addiction we call music. Nice comp. btw, haunting.
Your orch. piece was artfully done...instead of just having lydian harmonies being dropped in like bricks by the left hand, you used various lines of timbre to outline them. That took some thought and effort and displayed the lydian's potential beautifully!
It’s 2020 and I’m still watching this vid. Thanks Rick. The sound of Lydian #9 reminds me of some movie scoring like the fracture or the soundtrack to a documentary on some gloomy murder like the Amityville murder. Shrouded in dark mistery
@@laurant4282 It all started in music theory class in college, talking about enharmonics and how B# would have double flats. Then I combined it with the pun on "major general" to give me my user name that I have pretty much everywhere.
These songs are still with me years later. As soon as it starts playing, I'm back in that floating, haunting, yet incredibly beautiful musical landscape. This piece would be stunning if played by a live orchestra.
Oh yes This has Beethoven all over it! Ironically, your piece also reminds me of a lot of cable mystery movie soundtracks. Its the movement to that #7 and hearing the #9 in the chord that keeps you on edge. Thanks so much Rick for breaking down this absolutely gorgeous, melancholy corner of music theory!
You're very welcome! I like coming up with these short pieces so I can play them for my kids. I am starting to teach them film scoring so you will start to see more images over the music. They are helping me with the concepts behind the video and what works with the music. It's fun!
You're an absolute genius. I just recently discovered your videos, and I haven't figured out what is most mind blowing. The vast amount of knowledge on theory, your insane skills on guitar, or your back story. Maybe it's your teaching skill that's most incredible. I learned more in an hour, and transferred it on my own for the next 6 and it's still spawning off new discoveries. Thank you so much!
Rick I have a Roland synthesizer for guitar and a footswitch, so I can hold triads and basses and easily play all your triads or polychords with the guitar, I was just practicing triads for Lydian # 9 and my friend says it sounds like The Omen !!! hahaha, thank you very much for allowing me to terrorize my friends with your triads, I really learn a lot with your channel, thanks again and please do not stop making videos ever !!
Simply brilliant. Haplessly forlorn! I love it. The imagery during your piece fits perfectly. It seems there is much potential in Lydian #9. Thanks for your most excellent videos, Rick!
The footage should have been driving in Boston. It would certainly exemplify the typical mood while driving on the Pike. Jokes aside, this piece keeps bringing me to a particular word. Forlornness. This exemplifies the very definition of the word. Very well done.
I think its melancholy because of of the slow movement and the high notes and I think at parts its calm and at parts like 8:03 - 07 is both melodic and beatiful
With all respect; you're one's of the more cultured person in music theory that I have knowledge in all my life... You're a real genius in the matter... Thank you for your wisdom!! Excuse my English 😣
I'm really loving the sound of the Lydian #9 scale and the harmonic possibilities! Really dramatic and eerie sounding. Instant movie soundtrack. Thanks Rick for another awesome video. Cheers
It's a beautiful mode and your explanations are always sufficient for the understanding. You shouldn't pay attention to the complainers. Watching that video, I couldn't avoid thinking about calling you Rick "Hans Zimmer" Beato, which is intended to be a compliment. Very nice job.
Rick, I have probably watched all of your videos and can never adequately tell you how grateful I am to have you truly open up my ears to all these new modal sounds. I especially love your endorsement of the piano virtuoso Ayden Esen. I sincerely hope one day he does become a household name in the same breadth as Keith Jarret and Oscar Peterson, etc. I would say, imho, that Angelo Badalamenti certainly is the Ayden Esen of composition, too. I would just love if you could devote a lesson to his composition style.
Man, 2 years ago i was using this mode on a ideia i had, but i didn't check all the possibilities i could do with this mode, thank you so much for the video, and by the way, your original footage sounds amazing i loved it. Keep on with these brilliant videos. Thanks.
unbelievable man .....it all makes sense ....transposing all of those notes to the guitar , learning the resulting scales and jamming along is amazing ....I have never played better thank you
I have been a long time fan of exploring the inquisitive and "different" sonorities of the Harmonic and Melodic minor modes. The Lydian #9 is really interesting to me cause it's a darker spin on the bright Lydian, real interesting to play around with, In future videos I think it will be great if you would share some ideas regarding chord progressions and melody using these modes. I think just a few minutes of you talking about it would be valuable to people who are just starting to get around these modes themselves. Great lesson Rick, keep em coming!
you can have a darker lydian if you add a b2 in this scale ,it's the beautyful thing about this, you can mix, alter and and combine scales as you want.
Love the imagery as well, this is my hobby. Learn music theory to get composition ideas and apply to visual scenes gathered from driving my car with a GoPro and a drone
It just occurred to me after watching the video over the lydian #9 piece that the modes are like the seasons. Every season has its own feel and things special to it you can't get in any other.
I'm a little bit late, but I think this comes from unfamiliarity with the scale. It wants to resolve to a similar scale that you're comfortable with. We feel the same way at first with things such as the lydian mode, when we first hear them. One may hear it as simply a piece centered around the 4, and never resolving. Once we become familiar with the scale, it begins to feel like it's own distinct tonality. Just a thought, I very well may be wrong!
@@joelzaper Exactly!! The first time I found out about the standard Greek modes of the major scale, Dorian and locrian would always irritate me, because my brain had been programmed to resolved to the major root.
I was playing an A major arpeggio the other day, and played a half-step below each note. All of those notes can be practiced in A Lydian #2, for bebop, Western swing, bluegrass, whatever.
hey Rick. Thanks for all you do. I'm 62. played every instrument in the school band. a horn band. but was never taught any theory. and hadn't been in a band since. I'm retired and want to play with music as a hobby. have a brother that's a pro musician. plays base for the Pentones. They play for Tropical Isle on bourbon street in New Orleans. And he's able to support his family with that. He did a session with little feat but it never got published. anyway, This stuff is understandable. but overwhelming. I'm trying to learn it. I understand it needs to be memorized. LOL. I'll see what I can do. THANKS for putting it out there.
This is my favorite mode, though I'd known it by the apparently less common name of Lydian #2 (I don't know why Lydian #2 and Lydian #9 refer to the same mode, but they do), which is how it's listed on Ian Ring's site (along with the even less common, not to mention confusing, name of "aeolian harmonic"). It's just got this wonderful mood to it, a sense of mystery and tragedy, yet not without light and hope.
Your videos are very helpful as I resume my long-neglected interest in theory and composition. Thank you and please keep up the good work! I'm a bit less ignorant with each episode. No whining here, lol.
Wow--I don't know who Lydia was but she sure came up with a lot of cool stuff. Takes me forever to get through these videos because I, too, get caught up with playing it.
so interesting Rick you are the best teacher I've ever had thank you sooooo much i follow all of your videos they are really great mind opening and inspiring thank you !!!
Nice one Rick. I have a Lydian #9 / diminished piece on my channel called Echleon. I like the chords derived from the scale but I particularly like the simple bass line in the chorus of my song. Lydian diminished is an awesome scale!! 😁🎶🎸👍
Cool mode! I just got back from a rehearsal and checked in. I started playing around with it and it sounds like Beethoven Moonlight Sonata in some places. I have the chart out in the car I'll get it tomorrow and compare. Thanks!
Rick. I have been watching your videos for a few years now. I am always impressed by the knowledge and experience that you convey to the viewer. Unfortunately, I am not clear how it is that there are several different triads for each step in the Harmonic Minor modes like all other non-natural modes.
Terrific scale. Just trying to think of a way to fit it into my guitar playing. Perhaps over an A major 7 +11/minor major chord before approaching a G # 7 + 5 altered chord or something.
Definitely Heard a Supertramp Song in AMaj to ALydian! Another GREAT VIDEO RICK!!....Thank You and think i will Buy Myself a Xmas Gift aka The Beato Book:-))...
a unique thing about bVI : there isn't an avoid note, because the TriTone is between #2 and 6. the only limitation is : #9 and 13 should not be played together.
The sounds of an old, forgotten, tragic and unresolved great mystery.
Nicely put! I was thinking that beyond its contemporary nature you definitely hear tonalities from more classical eras, almost like a ghosty Bach-Mozart hybrid.
You hit the nail on the head, mysterious and tragic are exactly the words that popped into my head.
I watched three of your videos last night and then spent 9 hours behind my piano playing until 8 in the morning.
after watching this I have a feeling tonight will be the same.
or sleep deprivation!
John Cavanaugh agreed. Misplaced enthusiasm can do that.
d wolfy Do it man, have rests in the marathons tho, then rest for a day maybe
Just wondering. Have you had many sleepless nights since last year, and did your playing improve ? If you don't mind me asking, is there anything in particular you may have focused on ? I'm starting over on keys so...it's been a while. Peace.
I'm so there with you.
This video and scale opened by mind to new musical possibilities. I play jazz and black metal and this scale gives you the feel like you are in a dream from which you cant wake up. Thanks Rick!
It is refreshing to see your comment "I play jazz and black metal." I am metal through and through, and my searching through theory was always for the scales that can instill terror, darkness, unsettling feelings of woe that is black metal. Perhaps that is how I find myself at 36 newly discovering modal options. Thanks for the great comment and thank you, Rick!!! \m/
@@Lithuania8634 That's what every 0815 metal band does, kinda boring
a really great comperison and image!
yeah that's a great way to put it
Wow, what a beautiful composition! Lydian #9 has always been "one of those other scales in harmonic minor other than harmonic minor or phrygian dominant" that I've mapped out but never really tried in a musical context. Thank you for taking the time to explore it, share it, and then put it into a practical shape. Never realized how beautiful a scale it was, and I'm a huge lydian user.
There's something magical in music itself, being that there's always some surprise waiting to be discovered.
It is a hauntingly beautiful scale. Love the beautiful arrangement Rick.
I haven't tickled the ivories in almost 30 yrs, having focused mostly on guitar/bass/drums. Rick's lessons did me in, I'm getting a MIDI keyboard and anticipate long hours of study just around the corner. Here we go again, this addiction we call music. Nice comp. btw, haunting.
Your orch. piece was artfully done...instead of just having lydian harmonies being dropped in like bricks by the left hand, you used various lines of timbre to outline them. That took some thought and effort and displayed the lydian's potential beautifully!
With so many years studying tonality, these modes are a real mind twist!
Time to unlearn some stuff
It’s 2020 and I’m still watching this vid. Thanks Rick. The sound of Lydian #9 reminds me of some movie scoring like the fracture or the soundtrack to a documentary on some gloomy murder like the Amityville murder. Shrouded in dark mistery
B# Dim? Finally, someone's talking about REAL music. ;P
nah bro you forgot the flat /13/ part. "B# dim b13". lmfao.
Finally a real comment about real music 😂🤣
Why are you obsessed with B#?
@@laurant4282 It all started in music theory class in college, talking about enharmonics and how B# would have double flats. Then I combined it with the pun on "major general" to give me my user name that I have pretty much everywhere.
Nahh, its D double flat man.
These songs are still with me years later. As soon as it starts playing, I'm back in that floating, haunting, yet incredibly beautiful musical landscape. This piece would be stunning if played by a live orchestra.
7:50 was outstanding
Oh yes
This has Beethoven all over it!
Ironically, your piece also reminds me of a lot of cable mystery movie soundtracks. Its the movement to that #7 and hearing the #9 in the chord that keeps you on edge.
Thanks so much Rick for breaking down this absolutely gorgeous, melancholy corner of music theory!
You're very welcome! I like coming up with these short pieces so I can play them for my kids. I am starting to teach them film scoring so you will start to see more images over the music. They are helping me with the concepts behind the video and what works with the music. It's fun!
You're an absolute genius. I just recently discovered your videos, and I haven't figured out what is most mind blowing. The vast amount of knowledge on theory, your insane skills on guitar, or your back story. Maybe it's your teaching skill that's most incredible. I learned more in an hour, and transferred it on my own for the next 6 and it's still spawning off new discoveries. Thank you so much!
6 hours! Envious
Rick I have a Roland synthesizer for guitar and a footswitch, so I can hold triads and basses and easily play all your triads or polychords with the guitar, I was just practicing triads for Lydian # 9 and my friend says it sounds like The Omen !!! hahaha, thank you very much for allowing me to terrorize my friends with your triads, I really learn a lot with your channel, thanks again and please do not stop making videos ever !!
Simply brilliant. Haplessly forlorn! I love it. The imagery during your piece fits perfectly. It seems there is much potential in Lydian #9. Thanks for your most excellent videos, Rick!
The footage should have been driving in Boston. It would certainly exemplify the typical mood while driving on the Pike.
Jokes aside, this piece keeps bringing me to a particular word. Forlornness. This exemplifies the very definition of the word.
Very well done.
Your composition along with the video is breath-taking, this mode sound like sadness/confussion to me, loved it :3
I think its melancholy because of of the slow movement and the high notes
and I think at parts its calm and at parts like 8:03 - 07 is both melodic and beatiful
So much depth in those chords!!! So haunting so beautiful! I love it!!! Makes you see images in your head!
With all respect; you're one's of the more cultured person in music theory that I have knowledge in all my life... You're a real genius in the matter...
Thank you for your wisdom!!
Excuse my English 😣
The piece gave me smile. It sounds very bright to me 🥰
I think I heard that composition in a childhood nightmare. You are right. Both haunting and beautiful. You are truly a wild man Rick. 😊
This is...really flipping cool... I will have to master this scale as it is amazingly beautiful and complex in emotion.
Rick Beato is the best music teacher there is
I'm really loving the sound of the Lydian #9 scale and the harmonic possibilities! Really dramatic and eerie sounding. Instant movie soundtrack. Thanks Rick for another awesome video. Cheers
It's a beautiful mode and your explanations are always sufficient for the understanding. You shouldn't pay attention to the complainers. Watching that video, I couldn't avoid thinking about calling you Rick "Hans Zimmer" Beato, which is intended to be a compliment. Very nice job.
What complainers?
You Rick, open new universes for musicians with each and every that video you post. Can't thank you enough!
Seriously One of thr Best channel on UA-cam. I get so much from this channel ( more then my collge.. )
6:05 - super cool sounds; I'm inspired. thanks for the great video
Rick, I have probably watched all of your videos and can never adequately tell you how grateful I am to have you truly open up my ears to all these new modal sounds. I especially love your endorsement of the piano virtuoso Ayden Esen. I sincerely hope one day he does become a household name in the same breadth as Keith Jarret and Oscar Peterson, etc.
I would say, imho, that Angelo Badalamenti certainly is the Ayden Esen of composition, too. I would just love if you could devote a lesson to his composition style.
Michael Butler I
Man, 2 years ago i was using this mode on a ideia i had, but i didn't check all the possibilities i could do with this mode, thank you so much for the video, and by the way, your original footage sounds amazing i loved it. Keep on with these brilliant videos. Thanks.
unbelievable man .....it all makes sense ....transposing all of those notes to the guitar , learning the resulting scales and jamming along is amazing ....I have never played better
thank you
thank you so much rick and the piece at the end is amazing
Lovely mode, lovely piece. Thank you, Rick.
Rick, your videos are a very valuable resource for learning! Thanks a lot!
I have been a long time fan of exploring the inquisitive and "different" sonorities of the Harmonic and Melodic minor modes. The Lydian #9 is really interesting to me cause it's a darker spin on the bright Lydian, real interesting to play around with,
In future videos I think it will be great if you would share some ideas regarding chord progressions and melody using these modes. I think just a few minutes of you talking about it would be valuable to people who are just starting to get around these modes themselves.
Great lesson Rick, keep em coming!
you can have a darker lydian if you add a b2 in this scale ,it's the beautyful thing about this, you can mix, alter and and combine scales as you want.
Love the imagery as well, this is my hobby. Learn music theory to get composition ideas and apply to visual scenes gathered from driving my car with a GoPro and a drone
The Mysterium-the eternal question-beautiful.
Well this has given me something to think about. Thanks Rick.
It just occurred to me after watching the video over the lydian #9 piece that the modes are like the seasons. Every season has its own feel and things special to it you can't get in any other.
Agreed!
is it only me or it seems this scale doesnt resolve and looks like its always going somewhere?
No, it's not just you. I get the same feeling, but it's also what makes it intriguing to me.
Papa Arthritis absolutely !
abbasalikhan
Yeah totally unresolved.
Keeps you on the edge of your seat!
Lol
I'm a little bit late, but I think this comes from unfamiliarity with the scale. It wants to resolve to a similar scale that you're comfortable with. We feel the same way at first with things such as the lydian mode, when we first hear them. One may hear it as simply a piece centered around the 4, and never resolving. Once we become familiar with the scale, it begins to feel like it's own distinct tonality. Just a thought, I very well may be wrong!
@@joelzaper Exactly!! The first time I found out about the standard Greek modes of the major scale, Dorian and locrian would always irritate me, because my brain had been programmed to resolved to the major root.
Beautiful piece at the end, wow!
I was playing an A major arpeggio the other day, and played a half-step below each note. All of those notes can be practiced in A Lydian #2, for bebop, Western swing, bluegrass, whatever.
i like how knowledgable you are about modes
Very cool. This is worth watching. I learned a lot. Now I have a mode for my mystery and thriller compositions! Nice video as well. Thanks a lot!
hey Rick. Thanks for all you do. I'm 62. played every instrument in the school band. a horn band. but was never taught any theory. and hadn't been in a band since. I'm retired and want to play with music as a hobby. have a brother that's a pro musician. plays base for the Pentones. They play for Tropical Isle on bourbon street in New Orleans. And he's able to support his family with that. He did a session with little feat but it never got published. anyway, This stuff is understandable. but overwhelming. I'm trying to learn it. I understand it needs to be memorized. LOL. I'll see what I can do. THANKS for putting it out there.
Your piece reminds me of the soundtrack of Amnesia: The Dark Descent
you omit the AMaj7b5 chord. I am loving this chord. it is so versatile. pops up in tons of scales... including this one.
The Phrygian Dominant is my favorite mode from the Harmonic Minor. I'm going to try and combine those arpeggios with it and see how it sounds. Thanks.
How’d it go combining Phrygian dominant & Lydian #9?
This is my favorite mode, though I'd known it by the apparently less common name of Lydian #2 (I don't know why Lydian #2 and Lydian #9 refer to the same mode, but they do), which is how it's listed on Ian Ring's site (along with the even less common, not to mention confusing, name of "aeolian harmonic"). It's just got this wonderful mood to it, a sense of mystery and tragedy, yet not without light and hope.
Man. This videos inspire me so much. Thank you.
Also Holy Jesus what a composition! :D
so moving and deep! Appreciate!!
Your videos are very helpful as I resume my long-neglected interest in theory and composition. Thank you and please keep up the good work! I'm a bit less ignorant with each episode. No whining here, lol.
WOW. The mind boggles :-) LOVELY!
Wow--I don't know who Lydia was but she sure came up with a lot of cool stuff. Takes me forever to get through these videos because I, too, get caught up with playing it.
Didn't realise this variation was so versatile! Love that a minor major seven too! 🤘
Sharing
Great video as always and buying your book.
you are the best.
The more you dig in rick's channel, the more gold you find
Very cool! Thanks Rick
just discovered this treasure Thank you! you such a kind person
wow ! awesome ! that piece just from the notes of that one scale ! ? ! cool !
Yes, there are only seven notes used in this video.
THAT WAS AMAZNG!
so interesting Rick you are the best teacher I've ever had thank you sooooo much i follow all of your videos they are really great mind opening and inspiring thank you !!!
what a beauty of a scale!
Holy man that piece is so pretty! I’m gonna explore this scale/mode!
The music you made is beautiful
I hope you read this comment...
When you were playing 7th chords,
it sounded EXACTLY like a really well known Classical song,
Especially from 4:12!
Fantastic!
Nice one Rick. I have a Lydian #9 / diminished piece on my channel called Echleon. I like the chords derived from the scale but I particularly like the simple bass line in the chorus of my song. Lydian diminished is an awesome scale!! 😁🎶🎸👍
I can not find it marc!
Cool mode! I just got back from a rehearsal and checked in. I started playing around with it and it sounds like Beethoven Moonlight Sonata in some places. I have the chart out in the car I'll get it tomorrow and compare. Thanks!
Also am a fan of the Lydian b7. Excellent vid, Rick!
Beautiful
this scale is everywhere in ajfa
blackened is in e harmonic minor, and it often modulates to this mode
this is awesome! thank you so much
Rick. I have been watching your videos for a few years now. I am always impressed by the knowledge and experience that you convey to the viewer. Unfortunately, I am not clear how it is that there are several different triads for each step in the Harmonic Minor modes like all other non-natural modes.
Interesting, and beautiful.
Beautiful piece
Terrific scale. Just trying to think of a way to fit it into my guitar playing. Perhaps over an A major 7 +11/minor major chord before approaching a G # 7 + 5 altered chord or something.
whew! great stuff. thanks.
Myy lyre harp is tuned to this scale, I'm loving the Lydian harmonies
Awesome!
Great composition!
Definitely Heard a Supertramp Song in AMaj to ALydian!
Another GREAT VIDEO RICK!!....Thank You and think i will Buy Myself a Xmas Gift
aka The Beato Book:-))...
The piece at the end reminded me of a Resident Evil soundtrack ! Great stuff Rick!
great piece at the end.
Love the sound , pimpin stuff
Gustav Holsts uses this mode towards the end of Mars in the grand sweeping gestures by the woodwind and strings leading up to the big chords.
Fantastic
What an interesting sound!
You are a genius!
It works perfectly over the neapolitan IIb maj7 chord.
your videos rule man, very interesting subjects and great explanations
It sure yields some nice arpeggios on guitar!
Genius!
6:05 😥 sad and beautiful
Wow. I haven't even heard of many of those chords.
a unique thing about bVI : there isn't an avoid note, because the TriTone is between #2 and 6.
the only limitation is : #9 and 13 should not be played together.
The song at the end is INCREDIBLE! Can I buy it somewhere?
it fits perfectly in a 90's resident evil game.