What's the Difference Between D7 and D dominant 7?

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  • Опубліковано 21 сер 2024
  • My next video is on why I said "Dorian is a major scale with a b3 and b6." You guys are asking all the right questions, I'm so excited you like this nerd stuff.
    Short answer: music theory grammar.
    Long answer: I know why you all think it's the minor scale with a raised 6th. Hang on, we'll talk about it soon, my nerds.
    The questions in this video came from my student via our one-on-one guitar zoom lesson. We had a fascinating discussion, and I wanted to share that conversation on UA-cam. It's a really interesting way to look at modes, and the history of mixolydian mode is legit.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 359

  • @rayl6901
    @rayl6901 Місяць тому +29

    "Music theory goes through great lengths to avoid logic" I love this!
    Edit: I don't know why UA-cam suggested this video out of the blue, but you have a new subscriber 🙂

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +2

      I'm glad you're here! I just relaunched my channel, so I'm glad you found this video. If you've got any guitar or theory questions, ask away! Happy to make content for subscribers.

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen 28 днів тому

      @@rayl6901 so..what is so illogical about music theory...except the misquoted garbled BS so many who think they learned something spout? It's mostly simple arithmetic. The only illogical thing is basing everything in the key of C instead of the key of A. I'm thinking as usual, all women know nothing about logic so they spew nonsense like that. Lets just brand anything beyond 3rd grade level knowledge as illogical, as it's just too complicated to bother your pretty little head about.

    • @AC5SH
      @AC5SH 23 дні тому +1

      @LessonsWithLindy
      Guitar questions.... cool :)
      Sooooo, which is better to bang people over the head with in a bar brawl? Is it the Les Paul for it's sheer weight and impact, or a Strat for it's higher swing speed? Certainly not a D28 or anything like that, right?

    • @BeachJazzMusic
      @BeachJazzMusic 12 днів тому +1

      @@AC5SH I used the Strat for speed and more pointy edges.

  • @bigdogmurphy
    @bigdogmurphy Місяць тому +24

    That eleven and a half minutes was the most enjoyable amount of time I have ever spent watching a mode/scale tut!! You are awesome, and now I'm a new OLD fan!!

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +3

      Hey thank you! Welcome, I'm glad you subbed. I'm new to UA-cam, so if you've got any questions just ask away, more than happy to take questions from subscribers!

    • @greyseal53
      @greyseal53 Місяць тому +3

      @@LessonsWithLindy I have to agree with the big dog - your video just popped in my recommendations and it was the most enjoyable lesson I've encountered here on YT. I'm trying to expand my horizons and undo some of the damage I've incurred in my 40+ years of self-taught ignorance. Welcome to YT and I hope you stick around a while - I might actually learn something...!

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen 28 днів тому

      @@bigdogmurphy obviously you thinking modes need mentioning shows how little you know about music theory.

    • @bigdogmurphy
      @bigdogmurphy 28 днів тому

      @@5400bowen Obviously, your superiority complex is showing.

    • @5400bowen
      @5400bowen 28 днів тому

      @@bigdogmurphy and with good reason. 160 IQ. And your juvenile jealousy is showing!

  • @MirdjanHyle
    @MirdjanHyle Місяць тому +36

    D dominant 7 implies the existence of D submissive 7.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +9

      Someone had to say it. It was youuuuuuuuu

    • @AC5SH
      @AC5SH Місяць тому +2

      Lol

    • @tiermacgirl
      @tiermacgirl Місяць тому +1

      Not really, just that dominant 7 wants there to be

    • @plainzero
      @plainzero 19 днів тому

      lol nice one

    • @lucagiuberti682
      @lucagiuberti682 16 днів тому +2

      A submissive 7th could be called a diminished 7th, which in fact happens to be the dominant 7th...

  • @jefflowe7
    @jefflowe7 12 днів тому +3

    D7 is sourced from the G major scale, i.e. all the chord tones are from G major. The dominant scale, i.e. the mixolydian mode, is the major scale starting on the fifth and ending on the fifth an octave above.

  • @BeachJazzMusic
    @BeachJazzMusic 12 днів тому +1

    Like another person said below, Your video just showed up on my UA-cam feed and I'm glad it did. You just got another subscriber. I majored in music and have been a professional guitarist for over 40 years. I'm now retired. I wish I had a teacher like you when I was in school. Your enthusiasm and teaching method makes me want to learn more. The good thing about being on UA-cam is that you can reach far more people than a teacher in a university. Looking forward to more of your videos.

  • @bobrathunde8559
    @bobrathunde8559 19 днів тому +1

    Just found you Lindy.......so glad that I did! I'm a 70 year old self taught guitar player trying to make sense of music theory. You have a great way of explaining your teachings. Mostly you actually show us how things work in context. Makes it much easier for us old farts to get it. I play in a rock band with my 43 year old son on drums now so I'm always trying to get better. With your help I think I may be able to do that. Thanks for all you do!

  • @Tony78432
    @Tony78432 11 днів тому +1

    You’re a good teacher, you got a sub out of me lol 😂 I’m not new to these concepts but it’s good to refresh on them once in a while. I don’t tend to use theory much playing Stoner/Doom riffs but I like to study it in my spare time

  • @UnoUrong
    @UnoUrong Місяць тому +5

    Thank you... Lots of good guitar players do it right but might not know the theory and naming... Due to our egos...!! Thanks again Cheers!! It helps communication with other musicians.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      it's okay to not know something. May be a ego thing, but sometimes people don't have access to educational opportunities. Either way, I'm glad you enjoyed this! If you've got any questions about music theory or guitar, just ask away. I'm happy to make lessons from real subscriber questions

    • @R.Akerman-oz1tf
      @R.Akerman-oz1tf Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy By the bye; I just saw two 6'-5" guys in a hardware store. I doubt they had what Your looking for. & two nuns. Sounds like the intro of a joke(2 nuns walk into a hardware store... Someone has a punchline).

  • @fender101111
    @fender101111 Місяць тому +6

    Great video! 😂 and I think farming your students’ questions absolutely should be a great resource for content!

  • @RayWalker-pythonic
    @RayWalker-pythonic Місяць тому +6

    I love the way you explain this. I'm now a fan.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      Glad you subbed! Welcome! I'm new to youtube, so if you've got a question about theory or guitar, just drop it in a comment. Glad to make a vid from your questions.

    • @R.Akerman-oz1tf
      @R.Akerman-oz1tf Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy U R a "Force" (I reckon).

  • @JohnBowen-xs1vf
    @JohnBowen-xs1vf Місяць тому +2

    I’m loving this. A beautiful young lady actually making the modes interesting😊

  • @befingered
    @befingered 9 днів тому +1

    Another school of thought on how to define the difference:
    *D7* is the name of the chord. *Dominant* is the *role* of the chord.
    A *D7* is a *dominant 7* in the key of G. In other keys, it can be a *secondary dominant* if it precedes a chord rooted a 5th away. Sometimes, it's just a D7.

  • @jcb-ly9sm
    @jcb-ly9sm 18 днів тому +1

    not sure what black magic algo brought me here, but holy moly am i ever glad it did. Subbed. Educational, demonstrative, entertaining, clever. So good.

    • @MrG1275
      @MrG1275 16 днів тому

      The bleeping Vampire from the 5th century.

  • @caseyd.3142
    @caseyd.3142 Місяць тому +4

    The way I learn everything and more from your videos ❤

  • @jasonh396
    @jasonh396 Місяць тому +2

    I really like these explorations into the fine detail of music. Great video.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      glad it's helpful! Many more videos to come, if you have a lesson request, just ask!

  • @ATO19657
    @ATO19657 26 днів тому +2

    This was a badass lesson...Great work !

  • @raleighnordhagen4901
    @raleighnordhagen4901 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks. You make me smile.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      glad you had fun here! All I want is for more people to laugh about music theory.

  • @bltjonesthejonestones3697
    @bltjonesthejonestones3697 15 днів тому

    As someone else mentioned, I don't know why this was suggested on my home page, but it was quite serendipitous. That D7, Ddom7 thing had been on my mind of late. Now, after 50 years of guitar playing, I think I actually get it. Thanks, Lindy! Fun vid.

  • @Oliasn8
    @Oliasn8 17 днів тому

    You’re awesome,Lindy! First I’m finding you and your channel. What a great job you do of not only making theory enjoyable but making sense of where it all comes from.
    Thanks very much!! 🙏🏻

  • @drslump9314
    @drslump9314 17 днів тому +1

    That is how a teaching must be done whatever the subject is. Congratulations Sensei.

  • @FaberFedor
    @FaberFedor Місяць тому +3

    Thanks for the history lesson; _tres cool_. Now to study the connections between the mixolydian, pentatonic and blues scales...

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      yeah, they're all related, but also all so different. Music is weird. Context is complicated.

  • @LiamDTurner
    @LiamDTurner Місяць тому +5

    Holy shit that actually made sense to me!?

    • @R.Akerman-oz1tf
      @R.Akerman-oz1tf Місяць тому

      I bet Her tonic is "C", but that's water under the bridge(He-he).

  • @MultiFlange1
    @MultiFlange1 27 днів тому +1

    Best guitar lesson ever! On many levels!

  • @TheseusTitan
    @TheseusTitan Місяць тому +2

    It’s a minor 7th note that makes the chord (as apposed to a major 7th note)

  • @jessejordache1869
    @jessejordache1869 13 днів тому

    My way of understanding modes is to think of the new note that's flatted, and what role that note plays in the scale. The seventh is sort of the "spice" note: you can mess with it and it just adds a little something something. So songs like Norwegian Wood or the vocal line for You Really Got Me are both major with a flatted seventh, which is mixolydian. Flat sevenths in caps "...or should I say, SHE once had me." and "girl, you really got me GOing. you got me so i don't know what i'm DOing". That's it -- the flat seventh usually only appears once or twice in a melodic line, but it's enough to add some salt to the melody.
    The opposite of the mixolyidian is the Locrian mode: it's the phyrygian mode with a flat fifth (and the phrygian is a minor scale with a flat 2nd). The Locrian flats the fifth, and the fifth is the anchor note. You can literally mess with any other note in the scale and still have something easily recognizable as musical, but you cannot mess with the fifth: it unbalances the whole scale. Nobody writes music in the Locrian, unless the whole point of the song is "check me out -- I'm using the Locrian", and most of the time it's kind of a cheat anyway -- the easiest way to do it is to use the flat fifth as a percussive element, and then arrange your melody to avoid it, so the song sounds phrygian, but is TECHNICALLY locrian.
    Let's see: I don't quite _get_ the sixth, but fyi, when you start with the minor (Aeolian) scale and then sharp the third, you get the Dorian mode, as heard in the part in Mad World where it goes "and I find it kind of funny...." (the rest is just minor). Alls I know is that the Dorian scale is PERFECT there: if you can hit notes with your voice, and you sing the song that part in the minor key, instead of sounding dreary and dark, it sounds very "oompa loompa". The flat sixth is in caps: ...and I find it kind of FUNny, i FIND it kind of sad; the dreams in which i'm DYing are the BEST i've ever had.
    The third is the major/minor switch note. Your vanilla minor key is the major key with a flat 3rd, 6th, & 7th, but if you just flat the third, that's enough to throw you into a minor key, only it will be a little exotic.
    The second is.... well if you want something to sound "oriental" -- either Arabic or Japanese, flat the second.
    You can't flat a fourth. It's just built into the nature of the scale: a flatted fourth is actually a sharp third, which would give you three notes that are all a half step from each other, and now you're in 12-tone space. You can SHARP the fourth, which gives you the Lydian mode, which is even brighter than the major scale (aka the Ionian mode), but to me it sounds harsh. Classical composers use it when they want something to sound Polish.
    That's my "EZ guide to diatonic modes" (there are bebop scales too, but now you're really leaving "just feel the music, man" territory.)

  • @MCee2000
    @MCee2000 Місяць тому +1

    Thanks for that unique insight and entertaining presentation. Love your great sense of humor. I’m a fan, and now a subscriber.

  • @garypurcell7183
    @garypurcell7183 Місяць тому +1

    You're the most entertaining guitar tutor I have come across in all my years trawling this oft-pretentious landscape

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      I've been a real, in-person instructor for a looooooong time. There's a difference when you do this professionally, and then come to UA-cam second. :) I'm really glad you guys like my videos.

  • @RhomboMus
    @RhomboMus 24 дні тому +1

    As someone who wasn't able to absorb theory in a more concrete way due to trauma thank you for explaining this this way. I've been playing for 20 years and I understand theory but I didn't develop the language behind it till recently.

  • @jerryallaway2667
    @jerryallaway2667 Місяць тому +1

    I love the history you included, it gives me a deeper understanding on how things derive from the dark ages! I think it was called dark ages because very little about that era came to light, very little writing about it! India had a 23 note sequence in an octave.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      Glad this deepened your understanding! Yeah, this stuff is really cool when it's put into context. It's cool to think of it in modern day terms, but it's also really captivating to view it from the Renaissance era too.

  • @quailstudios
    @quailstudios Місяць тому +1

    OK... pretty fun video and editing. Not sure I would explain a D dominant 7 that way, but that's OK too. Thanks Lindy.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      Music theory compares things back to the major scale. My comparison confused a lot of people so I'm making a video explaining this concept next. It's pretty interesting, actually!

    • @quailstudios
      @quailstudios Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy I like starting with the Major Scale because a lot of music is in the Ionian mode. Minor is also very compelling and popular. It's variations to these two scales that make music come alive. We can describe them as different modes and we can describe them as variations to the major and minor scales. We can look at music in different ways, ways that make sense in our minds, and that's good.

  • @bertieborough
    @bertieborough Місяць тому +1

    I love music theory and Lindy, you are the Goddess of Toneality.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      I also love music theory, but I don't know if I'm a goddess. I'm a stupid guitar player who can't really do math so well. But still, I'm glad you enjoyed!

  • @renegade1283
    @renegade1283 16 днів тому

    Great lesson and terrific presentation. I was intrigued by the title so Decided to check it out. Light bulb lit up immediately. Got to check out your other vids now. Cheers from Australia.

  • @user-yr8es3uu9d
    @user-yr8es3uu9d Місяць тому +1

    Thanks!! What an awesome video. Love the historical context (esp because the theory itself wasn’t new to me). Also love the double entendres! Your humor makes this lesson really fun. 👍👍

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      Nice! Even if you knew these concepts and knew the theory, it's cool to look at the history. Haha, it's nice to review things you know from time to time. Glad you enjoyed!

    • @user-yr8es3uu9d
      @user-yr8es3uu9d Місяць тому

      Absolutely!! And unfortunately now I’m also sad to not be a vampire.

  • @vbfgrtjs
    @vbfgrtjs 15 днів тому +1

    As a guitarist and 5th century vampire, I never questioned the D7 chord. I just accepted it. Having now heard the worst blues ever, I can appreciate the simplicity of the pentatonic, though I'm more of a jazzed these days. Don't worry Lindy, we'll find someone to date you, just bone up on your double stops and harmonic tapping. That's what the kids are into today. Great vid!

  • @tommybotts
    @tommybotts 5 днів тому

    There are two types of 7th chords - a dominant 7th and a major 7th. The difference is a dominant 7th uses a flat 7th note in the key, whereas a major 7th uses whatever the 7th note as is in the key. Example: the 7th note in the Key of C is a B. The notes in a C7 chord are C E G Bb. The notes in a Cmaj7 are C E G B. Any place on a keyboard/fretboard that you find those 4 sets of notes, that would be a C7 or Cmaj7 chord. The order of notes does not matter.

  • @danielsperry8114
    @danielsperry8114 12 днів тому

    Mixolydian is the 5th scale of the major scale . This scale sound has a b7th in it to give it the dominant sound , i use it over a 7th , 9th and 13th chords . I love your videos and how you teach and i wish you were around when i was a kid ., i'm an old guy 61 and i learn stuff every time i pick up my guitar . .

  • @nickrosas8889
    @nickrosas8889 12 днів тому

    Your video was very informative for me. Thank you.

  • @julianmorrisco
    @julianmorrisco Місяць тому +1

    Ok. Firstly I thought you were another Lindy, a drummer friend of mine. Which is why I was curious that she would be explaining 7th chords on guitar. After I realised my mistake, I was curious to hear what the explanation was going to be, given it’s kinda a one word answer. But I loved that history stuff. Mixolydian has been my comfort zone before I knew what it was, I just liked the sound of the flattened seventh. Then to discover it was kinda the OG of western formal music was fascinating, and to hear aeolian and Ionian were so much newer! I always assumed the modes were fairly contemporary. Fascinating.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      okay, firstly i want to meet your drummer friend Lindy. I bet she's cool as hell. Secondly, haha yeah, I was trying to pull people in with a one-word answer, and then get you guys to stay for a 10 minute history lesson. I'm very glad you watched! Thanks for taking a look at my channel. I'm making more of these theory lessons this summer!

  • @joshuagodinez5867
    @joshuagodinez5867 12 днів тому

    Heh. I'm a new guitar player. No skillz, but I love music theory. My periodic question to my guitar teacher of "why is it A7 and not A dominant 7" always sparks a 15 minute discussion that is still over my head, but he mentions mixolydian and you finally brought it home to understand why he's saying that. Moreover, your discussion of 5th century music construction explains, a bit, the diminished chord construction since it's more of an interval viewpoint than stacked thirds point of view (maybe. I'm still learning). Yes, I'm one of those who thinks A7 should describe a A major 7 since that's diatonic and Adom7 would be the proper description of a dominant chord. After all, C#m from the A scale isn't called C# even though the 3 chord is always minor. Yeah, I know it's a shorthand way of describing the most common use of the chord and sure we don't say Amaj every time we play the tonic from the A scale, but when you learn "don't say it if it's major" and then introduce an A7 you automatically assume it must be major. No, here you have to explicitly say major if you mean the diatonically created Amaj7. It's sort of a "that's the say it's always been" type of notation that doesn't fit with things a beginner has learned up to that point and it makes you have to stop and think instead of fitting it into what you already know. So, thanks for the mixolydian reference and discussion of Gregorian chanties.

  • @richardjames6690
    @richardjames6690 15 днів тому

    Very funny, very instructive, a great watch, thank you Lindy

  • @Mooseboy08
    @Mooseboy08 Місяць тому

    Good Lord! Came here for a succinct explanation to give to my students about "why it's called Dominant 7", and got an amazing backstory. Superbly done! For what it's worth, I've been using modal theory and modal shapes on guitar for about 45 years. They're the main reason I'm able to improvise so easily and in tune. Also, for what it's worth, I'm not a vampire.

  • @JohnPDX
    @JohnPDX 14 днів тому

    You are a wonderful teacher! Thank you. Wishing you much success.

  • @WoodyNWUK
    @WoodyNWUK 15 днів тому

    Another new viewer from a mysterious sudden UA-cam recommendation. Entertaining and fun. Have subscribed. Looking forward to browsing your catalogue.
    (Also, I don't think I've ever wished I was a vampire as much as I do right now 😜😜)

  • @billymcguiremusic
    @billymcguiremusic Місяць тому

    Just had this pop up, and this is such an amazing lesson! You're such a natural teacher, loved the vampire joke at 3:15, and love the refreshing take on pulling scales from chords! I remember my early days of playing and learning theory reading people arguing for DAYS about different scales lol

  • @PostalPaulyShredz
    @PostalPaulyShredz Місяць тому +1

    Superb explanation and great humour too. New subscriber.

  • @SophisticatedBob
    @SophisticatedBob 15 днів тому

    Where did this channel come from? It fell into my feed, and wow, this is great. I've played guitar for 40 years and never heard this history. Fantastic.

  • @rob8482
    @rob8482 16 днів тому

    Awesome teaching style. Please, carry on!

  • @user-cv1jf1wq2m
    @user-cv1jf1wq2m 12 днів тому +1

    If a chord works to support the melody that you are playing then USE IT !

  • @MaestroBlight
    @MaestroBlight 16 днів тому

    Informative, entertaining, thorough, thoroughly entertaining

  • @jeshely
    @jeshely 14 днів тому

    Love this. Mixing history, relax simple talk, jokes and actual music theory in a manageable chunk of time motivates me to tune in and add little more to my knowledge. PS: Love your voice, you should also open an ASMR channel 😉

  • @kaiusna5515
    @kaiusna5515 Місяць тому +2

    Very well explained and very useful :)

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      hell yeah! If you ever have any lesson requests, let me know

    • @kaiusna5515
      @kaiusna5515 Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy Thank you so much! Let me think about some of the many things I would like, and I'll tell you. Thanks again :)

  • @dwaynemcallister7231
    @dwaynemcallister7231 Місяць тому +1

    You are unique, thx for the entertainment Lindy and have a great day!

  • @williamhurrelbrink3324
    @williamhurrelbrink3324 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you for this because I literally have thought I was missing somethin for the longest time 😂thank you thank you

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      happy to help! I'm glad this filled in some of the gaps

  • @BryanClark-gk6ie
    @BryanClark-gk6ie Місяць тому +2

    The difference is.... you don't have to look where to put your fingers when playing D7 but you do playing dominant D7.

  • @geschickt
    @geschickt Місяць тому

    I love, love, LOVE getting more than I bargained for, thinking I was just going to get a quick, straight up guitar thing. Such a pleasant surprise: usable guitar theory, an entertaining Western music history lesson, punctuated throughout with excellent humor! Amazing what you packed into eleven & a half minutes here--this was just brilliant & absolutely made my day--thanks so much!

  • @MrPhotonjockey
    @MrPhotonjockey Місяць тому +1

    Love your teaching style! I was a music major in college, but I switched my focus due to the stuffy nature of the professors.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      Nooooo having good teachers makes all the difference!

  • @hurdygurdyguy1
    @hurdygurdyguy1 28 днів тому

    Love that guitar snd the art deco truss rod cover!!
    I remember Mixolydian from my mountain dulcimer days, best mode!!

  • @wijk89
    @wijk89 Місяць тому +1

    Dominant seventh chords are often built on the fifth scale degree (or dominant) of a key. For instance, in the C major scale, G is the fifth note of the scale, and the seventh chord built on G is the dominant seventh chord.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      Yes, dominant is actually going off the V degree of a key, you nailed it. Gregorian Modes weren't thinking that way, but this is the modern and most common way to think of it present day.

    • @wijk89
      @wijk89 Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy I know.

    • @snotpu
      @snotpu Місяць тому

      @wijk89 would you Lindy mind explaining that in more detail, or differently. Not getting the connection between the fifth note and dominant seventh chord.

    • @wijk89
      @wijk89 Місяць тому

      @@snotpu A dominant seventh chord consists of the dominant triad (fifth note of the scale is the root of the dominant chord) and an added note a minor seventh above the root. For example, the dominant seventh chord in C major is G-B-D-F.

  • @crtune
    @crtune Місяць тому

    Enjoying this so far. To really get a taste of "Gregorian modal" styles listen to some Gabrieli Brass music. It's modal, later than the strictly vocal stuff, but strictly based upon certain church modes. The great reason to listen to this stuff is the trumpets and trombones are really clear and hit intervals pretty accurately.
    When I teach this stuff I start with the DORIAN mode because I want jazz trombone students to use that mode for their minor licks and immediately react when the see ii - V - I progressions. The Rameau thing is pretty insightful, frankly the whole group of strictly "classical" types like Hayden, Rameau, Mozart all reflect this attempt to systematize what would have been the earlier systems like counterpoint and modal music.
    For jazz they are going to have to go beyond modes and also have PENTATONIC mastery, and understand Blues Scale inserted transition notes. All this will imbue the licks you wind up having in your bag of tricks. I also try to impress upon students to understand the TRITONE portion of dominant chord creation. So, I point out to them an F and a B will outline a G7 really well with the lowered 7 and 3rd. They resolve two ways inward or outward - outward is a straight move to E and C. Inward is a resolution to F# and A#, so this resolves to an F# major chord, and that, too, is a tritone away from C. For playing backing chords on a keyboard the F, B, E (tritone, P4) type set of three is very useful.

  • @hybrydsanity5857
    @hybrydsanity5857 18 днів тому

    great info multi educational we should go on a bleep together .it's nice to use references and humor because i have to keep relearning this theory over and over it is like math in some ways .thank you !

  • @WavePotter
    @WavePotter Місяць тому

    Wow! I've been using modes for years and had no idea about this history. Thank you for this lesson! Love your goofy video style. 😅

  • @martinrennie7604
    @martinrennie7604 Місяць тому +1

    You are one funny lassie. Subbed.

  • @stevebrown5597
    @stevebrown5597 Місяць тому +1

    Ha I’m persuaded to get all myxolidian again!

  • @sammy-whirl8500
    @sammy-whirl8500 24 дні тому

    Thanks for the clarification. Very interesting lesson.
    -Count Dracula

  • @TomChopperGuitar
    @TomChopperGuitar 14 днів тому

    Funny and informative. Earned a sub

  • @user-jz6to8md3c
    @user-jz6to8md3c 6 днів тому

    I love that guitar.

  • @MrVesperatu
    @MrVesperatu 5 днів тому

    Pro tip, you can also play Ebm6 over D7.

  • @nnapsR
    @nnapsR Місяць тому +1

    LOVED this video, new watcher, but now subscriber, wish i could have found you before my hand surgeries , but loyal now

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      hey hey, I hope you stay! We're going to talk a lot about theory, so you won't need your hands for that. Just conceptual stuff. Every now and again I'll drop a technique video, but you'll have plenty of theory concepts to cover here with me

    • @nnapsR
      @nnapsR Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy not going anywhere i am in

  • @Rvictorbravo
    @Rvictorbravo Місяць тому +1

    Pretty cool, but I have a quibble. Giles Farnaby and Thomas Tallis were using a form of key signature and major and minor scales in the 1500s

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому

      yes this is called square notation. It's not organized how modern music is though, and it's centered around different concepts. They could write down the things they were singing, but it's not centered around diatonic like modern music is.

  • @joebubbit
    @joebubbit 11 днів тому

    I'm not a vampire, but I do a great Bela Lagosi imitation.

  • @user-ey7jo8cz1o
    @user-ey7jo8cz1o 16 днів тому

    Well done, Bravo !!

  • @mehmetnaciakkk3983
    @mehmetnaciakkk3983 21 день тому

    I enjoyed this and I was smiling throughout. That is a good sign 🙂 Music and humor. Very good. Thank you. And here ends the niceties. You asked for questions. You´re about to get one that many consider to be bad. It may even be the forbidden question. I don´t know. I have a seriously mixed background. Born in Turkey of Georgian and Greek and Crimean Tartar ascendency, living in Norway the last 50 years. Exposed early to Gregorian music then rock and blues and jazz and pop and Turkish "palace music" that build upon Gregorian, Balkan and middle eastern music. Later also to various folk music styles (Turkish, Balkan, Irish, Norwegian, and country). Here´s the question: Turkish "palace music" builds upon "makam"s, which I believe relates to modes. Do you have any idea what they are and how they can be explained in terms of western music theory? You´re allowed to Google it up before you answer 🙂 You´re also allowed to say "never heard of it" or "I´ll ask the vampire if I find one". Vlad would know. He had this thing with the Ottoman Empire 🤣

  • @freeplayfrank7736
    @freeplayfrank7736 13 днів тому

    I'm not a vampire but I have a pointy guitar (: You;re cute and funny too, I love it. In the words of Eric Bloom, "I couldn't tell you if it's a major ninth or anything but I know when it sounds good" I concur.

  • @JimiHendrix-es4lv
    @JimiHendrix-es4lv 18 днів тому

    The Dominant 7th of the key of D is A C# E G. In other words, the "A7" chord. Find any classically based scale manual and look up Dominant 7th arpeggios.

  • @unclemick-synths
    @unclemick-synths 15 днів тому

    The algorithm is being kind today - so good to see someone exploring theory without Major-tinted glasses. Major is the great usurper and the evidence is alphabetical: A to G naturally.

  • @kisschicken
    @kisschicken Місяць тому +2

    I came here, pitchfork in hand, but was pleasantly surprised to find the truth.

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      my clickbait worked, then?!

    • @ReadyMindsetGo
      @ReadyMindsetGo Місяць тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy It did for me! Did me a big 'huh?' when I read the title... then a big 'ahhh' after I clicked.

  • @ErnieLeblanc
    @ErnieLeblanc 18 днів тому

    Permission? - Go to Your Room, Young Lady!😆🙃😁😄

  • @theonetruetim
    @theonetruetim 29 днів тому

    So well done!
    Love that geetar, too! [btw] Black & Gold 335 style, yes please.

  • @guillaume1306
    @guillaume1306 Місяць тому +1

    Thanks for clearing that out! That was so well explained and that's something that I've been wondering for years. I just have one tiny comment....when you said that the Dorian scale is a major scale with a flat 3 and flat 7 at 2:53 that made me wince lol.
    I hear what you are saying by "major scale", as I understand that in this particular context you are referring to the fact that it's the intervals of the C major scale that you just shift to the 2nd degree of the scale (D) to get the Dorian mode..same intervals, just in a different order.
    However, since the Dorian mode is also a scale itself, it seems incorrect or confusing to say that it's "a major scale with a flat 3rd". It's not. The Dorian mode is a minor scale precisely because it has a flat 3rd, and also because in the major scale, the chord triad for the second degree (D dorian if we're in C Major) is minor (D F A).
    And, as written on Wikipedia:
    "The modern Dorian mode is equivalent to the natural minor scale (or the Aeolian mode) but with a major sixth. The modern Dorian mode resembles the Greek Phrygian harmonia in the diatonic genus. It is also equivalent to the ascending melodic minor scale with a minor seventh." - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorian_mode#:~:text=The%20modern%20Dorian%20mode%20is,scale%20with%20a%20minor%20seventh.
    So I don't think it's correct to say "this is a major scale with a b3, b7". What distinguishes the Dorian mode from other minor scales is the major sixth, not the b3 b7.
    Now, maybe you have a valid reason to refer to the Dorian mode a "major scale with a b3, b7" that I am not aware of. I am more than happy to be corrected and I'd actually be very interested to learn something new here. It's just that I've always been told that what makes a scale major or minor is the 3rd, and while I've been using and referring to this concept for years, it's the first time I am hearing somebody speaking of a major scale with a b3. :)
    Nevertheless, your explanation on the dominant chords and the history of the Mixolydian mode were crystal clear and very insightful. Great video. Thanks very much for that ! :)

    • @LessonsWithLindy
      @LessonsWithLindy  Місяць тому +1

      Music theory compares modes back to the major scale. This is a standard procedure in theory. I'm making this my next video as many, many people got confused when I said that. I'll explain how this works real soon. Hang tight! I understand why it's causing confusion.

    • @guillaume1306
      @guillaume1306 24 дні тому

      @@LessonsWithLindy Ok in that case that makes sense if modes are compared back to the major scale. Can't wait to watch your video on the subject! :)

  • @OIP_1
    @OIP_1 Місяць тому

    yeah so i'm going to be learning all my theory from this channel from now on

  • @stoatystoat174
    @stoatystoat174 14 годин тому

    You get a like for answering the title quiestion at the start 👍

  • @TheSimonemarini
    @TheSimonemarini 12 днів тому

    Nice to meet you Lindy,
    I'm a vampire from Italy.

  • @charlesgriffieth
    @charlesgriffieth 13 днів тому

    I just met you I just met you and got your grade you got me laughing my ass off

  • @Low.Key.Music01
    @Low.Key.Music01 Місяць тому

    The mixolydian scale has always been a party animal

  • @zazoomatt
    @zazoomatt Місяць тому

    Gee a Great Treat . . . . . Thank you Lindy.

  • @Skoden_lures
    @Skoden_lures Місяць тому

    Thank you Lidy, you explained this way better than my theory prof. I think I shall join the ranks of your admirererers. Sorry, couldn't quite work that start button.

  • @ErnieLeblanc
    @ErnieLeblanc 18 днів тому

    8:10 - 8:11 Nice Save, Flubber!🎯💯🎯

  • @ImYourOverlord
    @ImYourOverlord Місяць тому

    Yes, Lindy.

  • @madmac66
    @madmac66 18 днів тому

    Excellent. Very informative and fun along the way. Never knew any of that mixolydian Gregorian stuff. Fascinating. But….the dominant 7th DOES tie into the diatonic major scale doesn’t it? Did I misunderstand that statement.

  • @dallassukerkin6878
    @dallassukerkin6878 Місяць тому

    You know what I'm thinking? I'm thinking that Lindy has a gorgeous voice :chuckles:

  • @BlackSun3Tube
    @BlackSun3Tube 6 днів тому

    Nice explanations.
    And by the way, nice d'Angelico guitar (and nice guitar player too, of course ... I shouldn't have said this, but I had to, sry).

  • @johnCjr4671
    @johnCjr4671 14 днів тому

    Holy History Lesson ! 😅

  • @RyanNagel
    @RyanNagel Місяць тому +1

    Self taught. Thank you.

  • @Grandpa101
    @Grandpa101 15 днів тому

    This was a great explanation,,,now I’ll watched it again,,and see if I understand it,,,haha,,,nice job,,

  • @brotherofiam
    @brotherofiam Місяць тому +1

    Medieval blues band leader: The 8th Gregorian Mode in E boys. And a one, and a two, and a three...

  • @Steve-wz5pz
    @Steve-wz5pz Місяць тому

    Thumbs'ed up!
    Subscribed!
    AWESOME!!!!

  • @RayyMusik
    @RayyMusik Місяць тому

    I already knew most of that, having played blues and modal jazz ever since.
    But I really enjoyed your fresh, intelligent, hilarious kind of presentation! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
    Btw: how is music not black & white? Maybe not for a guitarist, but I always have only b&w keys in front of me. 🙃

  • @behnamdabestanizade
    @behnamdabestanizade Місяць тому +1

    Interesting stuff!

  • @shipsahoy1793
    @shipsahoy1793 26 днів тому

    🎷I don't need these music theory lessons, but I ❤ your jokes, so I subscribed ! 🥂😂👍👏

  • @Edward-MTBKR
    @Edward-MTBKR 15 днів тому +1

    So if I want to Party like it's 1599, I have to play Mixolydian mode?