Mixolydian Scale and dancing with your fingers! Guitar Lesson - EP589

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 84

  • @philmaresca
    @philmaresca Місяць тому +5

    You are definitely one of the best teachers on the internet!

  • @cyclopsasylum
    @cyclopsasylum Місяць тому +16

    One of the things I love about playing for the last 36 years is we never ever stop learning. I've been venturing into lead after playing mostly rhythm for years. Your videos help me get to the next level.

  • @dangquesadilla
    @dangquesadilla Місяць тому +11

    The brilliance of your compositions combined with your ability to break them down into useable pieces for us all to understand and improve our own experience with the guitar is extraordinary !!! You're like that ONE magician who will take you behind the curtain and show you how the tricks are done. NEVER change!!! ❤️🎸🔥

  • @user-pi9dc8qr1j
    @user-pi9dc8qr1j Місяць тому +2

    This was a confidence boost as it's the same way I've thought about modes - but wasn't sure if I was doing it right. On the, 'how do you know what mode/scale to play' question - Brian suggest 'use your ear', but you can also apply a bit of light theory - if you know how chords relate to a major or relative minor key. For example, the 2 chord vamp between A major and G major: neither the A or G major keys contain both those chords. Which major key does contain those chords? D major - hence play the D major scale over the vamp.
    The same theory/knowledge applies to more complex chord progressions. If someone hands you a set of chords to improvise over but doesn't tell you, 'this piece is in A mixolydian'. The chords are for example - A major to B minor to D to F# minor to G major then back to A - you can tell 'by ear' that the home chord is the A major, but the other chords don't all come from the A major key.
    If you know your major key chords well enough you'll recognise all those chords fit perfectly with the key of D major (even though, technically the piece is in A Mixolydian as A major is the 'home' chord).
    Most guitarists will already understand this principle with the Aeolian and Ionian modes - i.e. relative minor/major keys. A Aeolian is C major, for example - exactly the same notes, exactly the same chords just change the home chord/root note.
    To summarise, as Brian suggests, 'learn your major key'. All the modes can be understood from the major key perspective - just change the root note. For A Mixolydian play D major with A as the root note. For A Aeolian play C major with A as the root note. For A Dorian play G major but with A as the root note (remembering that the home chord will be A minor not major).....and so on.

  • @GuitarJoLa
    @GuitarJoLa Місяць тому +3

    Love your insights, Brian. They’re the true value of your teachings! 🎸💕

  • @bungalowbluesman
    @bungalowbluesman Місяць тому +4

    Thanks Brian. Re the talking, I could listen all day. 👍🏻

  • @markjames9487
    @markjames9487 Місяць тому +1

    Brian. This is exactly what I have been looking for. Your methods and your playing are brilliant, The way you break it down and talk it through. Thank you

  • @willischeyltjens2980
    @willischeyltjens2980 Місяць тому +3

    Lesson about my favorite mode. love mixolydiam and dorian. Well explained Brian. Thx

  • @wgclark110
    @wgclark110 Місяць тому +1

    I like that Steve. It gives me a map that I get and can practice my dance steps. Shift to C when playing G. And so on. Really cool. Thanks!

  • @aintnoleedguy
    @aintnoleedguy Місяць тому +1

    Very cool Brian. You wouldn’t be you if you skipped the “boring stuff” anyone can follow along with notes but it takes a true professional to be able to teach this stuff the way you do. Please don’t change.

    • @MrLicense
      @MrLicense Місяць тому

      I’d go further and say ‘a true musician’.

  • @dawin6710
    @dawin6710 Місяць тому +1

    A valuable lesson as usual. Thanks

  • @DavidColwell-x4d
    @DavidColwell-x4d Місяць тому +1

    Thank you Brian for another nice lesson ( light bulb moment on the a7 chord and the chromatic scale)😀

  • @jmoses580
    @jmoses580 Місяць тому

    I always always always learn something new on this channel!!!! I love it!

  • @mr.s5333
    @mr.s5333 Місяць тому +1

    I only wish your lessons were around in the 1990's when I first started playing Brian. I would have been so much of a better player today.

  • @tedlivermore6955
    @tedlivermore6955 Місяць тому

    Sweet playing man,just keep listening to it

  • @karrollwak2843
    @karrollwak2843 Місяць тому +1

    Thank You Brian!
    I understand your thinking and teaching
    Thank You
    Kk

  • @brianesposito5912
    @brianesposito5912 Місяць тому +5

    I hear Jerry Garcia! Fire on the Mountain, Dark Star, Birdsong.

  • @HughJengine
    @HughJengine Місяць тому

    You explained how to find the appropriate mixolydian scale really well, for my brain anyway. 😊👍

  • @Sullmike
    @Sullmike Місяць тому

    The first 14 minutes really spoke to me. thank youi.

  • @raymobbs732
    @raymobbs732 Місяць тому +2

    Hi Brian I was trying to learn scales for so long and modes.. I kept on forgetting them I couldn't get my head around modes I was going crazy and thought perhaps I'll never be able to improvise. After becoming a member and downloading caged shapes over scales and your simple explanation for modes. And all your other great lessons I have become a good intermediate guitar player
    Your right!! your teaching is different but hits the right chord..

  • @gnawbabygnaw
    @gnawbabygnaw Місяць тому

    Sweet guitar too 👍👍

  • @troytempest290
    @troytempest290 Місяць тому

    Beautiful 👏

  • @masterbuilder3166
    @masterbuilder3166 Місяць тому

    Brian your awesome bro. Thanks

  • @Quikshiver
    @Quikshiver Місяць тому +5

    Looks to me like whatever key you’re in, find that root on the 6th string and the note just below on the 5th string, same fret, is the root of the major scale to play over it. Thus below A is D, below G is C, below B is E, and so on.

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому +1

      That’s one way to approach it for sure!

    • @cyclesudamerika9246
      @cyclesudamerika9246 Місяць тому

      Great. Thank you a lot for this great advice.

    • @tedlivermore6955
      @tedlivermore6955 Місяць тому

      Hey cool,thank you

    • @mikez4759
      @mikez4759 Місяць тому

      Are you saying to play a mixolydian scale in the key of G you play a C major scale?

    • @Quikshiver
      @Quikshiver Місяць тому

      @@mikez4759 that’s my understanding 🙂

  • @annie4971
    @annie4971 Місяць тому

    Absolutely beautiful 💓

  • @ojaisherpa
    @ojaisherpa Місяць тому

    Beautiful guitar!

  • @JaysonT1
    @JaysonT1 Місяць тому +2

    Guy is a beast

  • @michaeltew4492
    @michaeltew4492 Місяць тому

    The trick I learned was to just play the pentatonic scale a minor third down from the key, For example: Song in C....play the A pentatonic against that and land on the C more than the A. At least that works in bluesy song.

  • @gregcaudill9997
    @gregcaudill9997 Місяць тому

    The only thing that would be better is one on one in person with you. Thank you Brian

  • @frodomocho1211
    @frodomocho1211 Місяць тому

    I think you're right! Thank you. 😄

  • @superfuzzymomma
    @superfuzzymomma Місяць тому

    Sweet, brother. Sweet.

  • @andychapman8667
    @andychapman8667 Місяць тому

    Yes! ‘On Broadway’ George Benson of course!

  • @ВладимирПрименко-о5б

    There is another way-you can make a mixolydian or Lidian using the major pentatonic as a basis, and Dorian and Frigian can be made from the first box of the minor pentatonic by adding 2 more notes there according to a simple pattern.

  • @MatthewWorthing
    @MatthewWorthing Місяць тому

    Nice timing as I just bought my first guitar that has a bigsby !

  • @markr8326
    @markr8326 Місяць тому +1

    Hi Brian ,thanks for the great lessons. Please can you tell me ,when you say the Mixolydian scale "out of the E position" [@16" 25 secs] are you referring to Caged shapes ?

  • @ShinyFlakesShinyFlakes
    @ShinyFlakesShinyFlakes Місяць тому +1

    Do a lesson on arpeggiating diminished chord scalular runs

  • @bobfurlani3314
    @bobfurlani3314 Місяць тому

    Nice, kind of a surfy groove

  • @MrJ-hs6zi
    @MrJ-hs6zi Місяць тому +2

    They say the neon lights are bright on Broadway!

  • @johnletitia
    @johnletitia Місяць тому

    Thanks much!

  • @radstockrecording4136
    @radstockrecording4136 Місяць тому

    Thankyou Sir.

  • @alexanderl.diallo5508
    @alexanderl.diallo5508 Місяць тому

    Sounds Miles Davis. Human Nature classics here. Concert in Germany1988.

  • @timothyarnold9350
    @timothyarnold9350 Місяць тому +1

    Great lesson. So if I am playing along and start to improvise how do I know if a song is Mixolydian, or Lydian, or Dorian, etc?

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому +2

      Use your ear - start with the major scale and see what needs to be adjusted. See 8:27

  • @douglaschristine8387
    @douglaschristine8387 Місяць тому

    I did the same thing Brian and the book is still sitting under my guitar table, boring. Once and awhile I look up something. Good lesson.

  • @pepelepew207
    @pepelepew207 Місяць тому +1

    I try to think about the mixolydian as a major scale that starts on the 5th interval. So a g mixolydian are the same notes as the C major scale, starting on the 5th interval, G.

  • @mattprince9204
    @mattprince9204 Місяць тому

    Difficult but I like it 🎸👌

  • @mikez4759
    @mikez4759 Місяць тому

    Great lesson. So if I’m in a jam, and the song leader says this song is in the key of G, can I play a mixolydian scale regardless of what the other chords are in the song? and what scale would that be-D MAJOR scale?

  • @Rob-pr1oz
    @Rob-pr1oz Місяць тому

    Another great lesson. Do you have any lessons on typical modal chord progressions. Like Mixolydian or Dorian chord progressions?

  • @whiskersb5296
    @whiskersb5296 Місяць тому +1

    Kind of a dark star meets on broadway thing.

  • @BillOakley-t6w
    @BillOakley-t6w Місяць тому

    So to play using mixolydian you use the major scale shape of the root's fifth and use that shape with the target the root in that shape?

  • @phillipnorman7423
    @phillipnorman7423 Місяць тому

    Sweet

  • @tbone2451
    @tbone2451 Місяць тому

    Nice lesson, I think I’m missing something. The A9 you’re calling out, isn’t that a B minor ? 987.

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому +1

      No, that would be an E minor. See 19:07 in the video where I reference another lesson that explains why.

  • @Steven-bs6tp
    @Steven-bs6tp Місяць тому +2

    The song sounds like Golden Years by David Bowie

    • @Edman116
      @Edman116 Місяць тому +2

      I thought it was the song "On Broadway".

    • @Steven-bs6tp
      @Steven-bs6tp Місяць тому

      @@Edman116 On Broadway works as well.

  • @mikez4759
    @mikez4759 27 днів тому

    If I’m in a jam how do I know if it’s a mixolydian progression?

  • @kulishekkulda3785
    @kulishekkulda3785 Місяць тому

    👍🙏 my only problem is to know at the start of the song which mode shall I use to
    Is my understanding right that I have to know context - other chords?
    And e.g. when the chords path is A to G = 5th to 4th than I have to use D major = 1th which is paralel with G myxolydian
    Is it possible to use such template or is it nonsense?
    Thnx for reaction🙏and greetings from🇨🇿🥃

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому +1

      Just let your ear tell you what to do. Don’t think about what mode or scale to use… feel your way through the notes and then analyze after the fact what it was you were doing.

  • @Aaron5616
    @Aaron5616 Місяць тому

    Could we think of it as being the 4 of A = mixolydian so e.g. G mixolydian play 4 of G = C scale ?? That seems simpler than what is A the 5th of. Sorry if that is a dumb question

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому

      i think that would be confusing... Mixolydian is the 5th mode (they go in order).. and so you really should think of it representing your 5 chord.

  • @oddshot60
    @oddshot60 Місяць тому +2

    About 35 years ago I was looking for a teacher to help me learn single note jazz soloing. I asked one of these instructors how a guy like Joe Pass can go up and down a neck like that. His answer: "Well, Joe Pass is GOOD" as he handed me a bunch of Mel Bay books.

  • @BrothaAustin
    @BrothaAustin Місяць тому

    So mixolydian is the major scale of the 4 chord?

  • @jonnyk1961
    @jonnyk1961 Місяць тому

    don't "flat the seven", "flatten the seventh" .... it makes the lick sound so much better.

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому

      I have no idea what that means

    • @jonnyk1961
      @jonnyk1961 Місяць тому

      @@activemelody Apologies - didn't think you would take any notice of this. I was failing badly to point out that I use (in the UK) "flatten the seventh" and not "flat the seven" . The rubbish about the perfect continuous tense I have removed so no one else has to read it. I do watch your channel all the time though.

  • @pc2nite
    @pc2nite Місяць тому

    Please don’t just buzz up and down between two D notes as you might when really soloing with the actual D major scale, for example over the chords D and A. You will get the closet similar effect whilst soloing over A and G by using the other part of the D dance that buzzes between its two A notes. Try this with a jam track or a colleague. Despite your fingers following the D dance it is very important that your ear is led by the chords to focus on their home, resting place which is A, not D.

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому

      i think you're missing the point. your ear is the ultimate guide - as i state in this video several times... (see 5:31) - the point is that even with a great ear, to be able to get through the scale quickly, your fingers / muscle memory has to kick in to guide the process... which comes from the major scale.

  • @peppyharley6901
    @peppyharley6901 Місяць тому +1

    It’s simpler just to flatten the 7th, learn the intervals, you’ll never go wrong!

    • @activemelody
      @activemelody  Місяць тому +2

      Yes, but… to play through the scale quickly all over the fretboard without having to think about it, requires the finger dance of the major scale. You don’t have time to remember flatting the 7 when you’re playing it fast

    • @peterhall4852
      @peterhall4852 Місяць тому

      ​@activemelody I was taught by a decent gigging musician and he insisted I could play C Major anywhere, and at a decent speed.
      Then he worked me through the scales 1#, 2# etc.
      Then triads on the top three strings.
      We never mentioned scales or modes. But, really I think he was teaching me keys,modes,ear training and intervals. I just never realised it.

    • @dewardroy6531
      @dewardroy6531 Місяць тому +1

      To paraphrase Joe Bonamassa, if you’re thinking about the next thing, in real time, you’re already too late.

  • @jeandurand3095
    @jeandurand3095 Місяць тому

    Sounds like Dire Straits

  • @deadmanswife3625
    @deadmanswife3625 Місяць тому

    Hmmmmmm