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Do jazz musicians improvise on the parent scale in addition to the chord-scales?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraWhole-step technique for figuring out jazz scales?How to achieve jazzier improvisation?Using modes for jazz solo improvisationWhat are the best ways to practice Jazz improvisation on the guitar?Playing scales over I IV V progressionHow to recognize the modal scale starting from the chord?Jazz improvisation on descending chord progressionIs the melodic minor scale use as the basis of chord progressions in modern jazz?How to turn each chord in a progression into separate scales?Are Secondary Dominants related to Chord-Scales?Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz scales?










4















I noticed that jazz musicians improvise on actual chords. This makes sense for modal jazz since the chords in the progression might not be related.



But for tonal jazz, say we have a "ii-V-I" progression. I've seen videos where they improvise on each chord. so the ii7 might have a Dorian scale, the V7 may have an associated Mixolydian scale, and the I might have a Lydian scale.



But what about the parent key? In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key. So for example if this was C-major, that's the scale they'd improvise on. Does that happen in jazz too? What scale does the melody come from?



Edit: I wasn't aware how many scales are in an actual jazz song. I just started working on standards in the last few days. so I guess the melody is influenced from the different scales that make up the piece. I was used to pop where the melody was usually just one scale.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:27






  • 1





    @ggcg so you're saying they do both?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:28






  • 2





    No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:54






  • 2





    So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:55






  • 1





    "In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

    – David Bowling
    Apr 17 at 22:49















4















I noticed that jazz musicians improvise on actual chords. This makes sense for modal jazz since the chords in the progression might not be related.



But for tonal jazz, say we have a "ii-V-I" progression. I've seen videos where they improvise on each chord. so the ii7 might have a Dorian scale, the V7 may have an associated Mixolydian scale, and the I might have a Lydian scale.



But what about the parent key? In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key. So for example if this was C-major, that's the scale they'd improvise on. Does that happen in jazz too? What scale does the melody come from?



Edit: I wasn't aware how many scales are in an actual jazz song. I just started working on standards in the last few days. so I guess the melody is influenced from the different scales that make up the piece. I was used to pop where the melody was usually just one scale.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:27






  • 1





    @ggcg so you're saying they do both?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:28






  • 2





    No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:54






  • 2





    So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:55






  • 1





    "In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

    – David Bowling
    Apr 17 at 22:49













4












4








4


1






I noticed that jazz musicians improvise on actual chords. This makes sense for modal jazz since the chords in the progression might not be related.



But for tonal jazz, say we have a "ii-V-I" progression. I've seen videos where they improvise on each chord. so the ii7 might have a Dorian scale, the V7 may have an associated Mixolydian scale, and the I might have a Lydian scale.



But what about the parent key? In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key. So for example if this was C-major, that's the scale they'd improvise on. Does that happen in jazz too? What scale does the melody come from?



Edit: I wasn't aware how many scales are in an actual jazz song. I just started working on standards in the last few days. so I guess the melody is influenced from the different scales that make up the piece. I was used to pop where the melody was usually just one scale.










share|improve this question
















I noticed that jazz musicians improvise on actual chords. This makes sense for modal jazz since the chords in the progression might not be related.



But for tonal jazz, say we have a "ii-V-I" progression. I've seen videos where they improvise on each chord. so the ii7 might have a Dorian scale, the V7 may have an associated Mixolydian scale, and the I might have a Lydian scale.



But what about the parent key? In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key. So for example if this was C-major, that's the scale they'd improvise on. Does that happen in jazz too? What scale does the melody come from?



Edit: I wasn't aware how many scales are in an actual jazz song. I just started working on standards in the last few days. so I guess the melody is influenced from the different scales that make up the piece. I was used to pop where the melody was usually just one scale.







jazz improvisation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 17 at 21:38







foreyez

















asked Apr 17 at 19:17









foreyezforeyez

5,76042690




5,76042690







  • 2





    I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:27






  • 1





    @ggcg so you're saying they do both?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:28






  • 2





    No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:54






  • 2





    So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:55






  • 1





    "In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

    – David Bowling
    Apr 17 at 22:49












  • 2





    I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:27






  • 1





    @ggcg so you're saying they do both?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:28






  • 2





    No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:54






  • 2





    So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

    – ggcg
    Apr 17 at 20:55






  • 1





    "In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

    – David Bowling
    Apr 17 at 22:49







2




2





I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:27





I can't comprehend the question. Every jazz player that I like to listen to does all and none of these things. The chords don't define the tune and improv is variation on a theme. The great ones use the head, which can be harmonized many different ways. And by the way, all those head notes are "in or near the chords that harmonize them" and "in the modes and or parent key", modulo accidentals.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:27




1




1





@ggcg so you're saying they do both?

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:28





@ggcg so you're saying they do both?

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:28




2




2





No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:54





No, head is the melody. That's the jazz jargon I learned in the 80s.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:54




2




2





So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:55





So, rather than meandering about, literally take a phrase and elevate it. The first phrase of Ornithology is a great one to shred with, and a typical Parker-ism as he uses it all over the place.

– ggcg
Apr 17 at 20:55




1




1





"In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

– David Bowling
Apr 17 at 22:49





"In pop I'm used to people improvising on the actual key." -- 1) You can stay in the key but use different scales. 2) You might be surprised how often pop music strays. Carlos Santana has always played different scales on different chords; of course, The Beatles; Robben Ford mixes it up quite a bit.

– David Bowling
Apr 17 at 22:49










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















7














Traditional jazz - roughly 1930's to 1950's - based improvisation on embellished arpeggios which followed the chord changes of a song.



Modal jazz moved away from arpeggios on rapid chord changes and focused more on scales as the basis of improvisation.



Later in the 1970's chord/scale system emerged as a way to teach jazz.



A huge list of jazz greats didn't use the chord/scale system.



In that great jazz past, when someone improvised over ii V I, using arpeggios, were they thinking about the "parent key?" Maybe. It's hard to know exactly what they thought. But, we have records and transcripts of solos to know what they played. It can be tricky to talk about inextricably linked ideas like scale/key/chord/melody, even trickier to get inside a past musician's head to know what they thought.



You might want to get improvisation transcriptions of particular solos that you want to emulate and then analyse the music... then try asking questions about how they may have conceptualized what they were playing.




EDIT



Below is one bar from a Charlie Parker solo transcript...



enter image description here



...the phrase can be analyzed as an arpeggio - broken chord, if that term is preferred - embellished with non-chord tones which I circled in red: an appoggiatura high D and two passing tones B and low D.



The full transcript is at http://www.jasonstillman.com/uploads/3/0/2/8/3028328/charlie_parker_cherokee.pdf



This kind of melodic line is found in lots of solos. In fact you should notice a conspicuous absence of scales - conjunct, step-wise motion - rather you will see a lot of disjunct motion on chord tones.



Keep in mind that when a seventh chord is filled in with passing tones it will produce a full octave scale at which point we can't really make a clear distinction between chord based or scale based although the majority of the material will most likely display chord tone based lines. This filling in a broken chord with non-chord tones was to main point of your earlier question Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz chord-scales?.




Compare to John Coltrane's solo on So What for a modal approach that appears more scale based. I have to show a longer excerpt to reflect the very long harmonic rhythm of one chord for many bars...



enter image description here



...notice the long lines of step-wise motion (scalar playing) and there are two phrases that encompass a full octave of straight scale lines. This is an example of scales in modal jazz.






share|improve this answer

























  • not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:48












  • a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

    – pro
    Apr 17 at 20:52











  • @pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:54











  • @foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

    – Some_Guy
    Apr 17 at 21:01







  • 1





    @foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

    – Michael Curtis
    Apr 17 at 21:20


















6














Yes, some jazz musicians improvise on the key, especially when they are improvising from the melody, not the chords (harmony).



The advantage of improvising on the harmony is that you minimize the clashing notes and have a ready palette of color notes that come from ornamenting the underlying chord.



But some jazz musicians improvise entirely from the melody, such as Bill Frisell. In this case, improvising on the key gives you a distinct advantage, because you can concentrate on deconstructing and reconstructing melodic fragments.



Keep in mind that in a given melody, even if it is in a particular key, there may be key centers that suggest different keys within the same tune. For example, even if you improvise on a particular key, different sections may have different modes based on the melody (key signature) scale.



For example, for a tune in the key of D major, the first section might be D Ionian but a different section might be in A Mixolydian. Same key signature, different scales. In a different mode you concentrate on different notes. So in my example, your "strong" notes (1, 3, 5) and chords (I, ii, IV, V, vi) in D Ionian are going to be different than in A Mixolydian.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Dom
    Apr 18 at 12:52


















3














I think you are asking whether what you call the pop approach to improvising—finding a common scale/key that works over many chords in sequence—is valid in jazz. The simple answer is yes. Indeed, learning to spot common scales and tones is an important hurdle that many musicians trained to think chord by chord learn to overcome in college.



In the example you've given, a ii-V7-I in C major, note that the scales you derive when thinking about the changes individually actually consist of the same collections of notes:



  • Dm will be a D dorian, which contains the same notes as C major
    (ionian).

  • G7 will be G mixolydian, also equivalent to C ionian.

  • Over the C, you're actually likely to use the ionian mode in this context. (The
    lydian may be used if you have an extended vamp on this passage or
    for a more "modern" sound, but it's perfectly valid to use ionian as
    long as you don't attempt to resolve on the F.)

Thus, if you are simply looking for a collection of notes that works well over all these chords, then C ionian (C major) will certainly do the trick. Of course, jazz songs are more likely than pop songs to switch key centers quickly, but you can still use the same approach. If you have a chord progression like



Dm G7 C %
Fm Bb7 Eb %


you can play C major over the first four bars and, by similar logic, Eb major over the next four bars.



This is called the key-centers approach.



If the key-centers approach is valid, why do books on jazz improvisation often ask you to think about the chords individually (which is called the modal approach)? Two reasons, both (in my opinion) pedagogical.



First, beginner musicians tend to be biased towards the first few notes in a scale. If you tell a student that the C major scale is valid over the progression Dm G7 C, they will often just repeat patterns involving the notes C, D, and E. Asking the student to think about these as three different chords guides them to other parts of the scale. The same student, thinking about G mixolydian over the G7 chord, now will center their playing around G, A, and B instead. This is still less than perfect, of course, but it's a teaching strategy designed to encourage students to explore the full range of the scale.



Second, and related, is that while all the notes in the C major scale are broadly compatible with these chords, the color and stability of the individual notes depends on what chord you're on. The note F sounds great over a Dm chord; not so much over a C major (although if you move quickly down to E it's fine). When you think about the modes separately, you may be able to spot the stable notes—like 1, 3, and 5—more quickly.






share|improve this answer























  • I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

    – BiAiB
    Apr 19 at 9:20











  • Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

    – Max Kapur
    Apr 21 at 22:51











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














Traditional jazz - roughly 1930's to 1950's - based improvisation on embellished arpeggios which followed the chord changes of a song.



Modal jazz moved away from arpeggios on rapid chord changes and focused more on scales as the basis of improvisation.



Later in the 1970's chord/scale system emerged as a way to teach jazz.



A huge list of jazz greats didn't use the chord/scale system.



In that great jazz past, when someone improvised over ii V I, using arpeggios, were they thinking about the "parent key?" Maybe. It's hard to know exactly what they thought. But, we have records and transcripts of solos to know what they played. It can be tricky to talk about inextricably linked ideas like scale/key/chord/melody, even trickier to get inside a past musician's head to know what they thought.



You might want to get improvisation transcriptions of particular solos that you want to emulate and then analyse the music... then try asking questions about how they may have conceptualized what they were playing.




EDIT



Below is one bar from a Charlie Parker solo transcript...



enter image description here



...the phrase can be analyzed as an arpeggio - broken chord, if that term is preferred - embellished with non-chord tones which I circled in red: an appoggiatura high D and two passing tones B and low D.



The full transcript is at http://www.jasonstillman.com/uploads/3/0/2/8/3028328/charlie_parker_cherokee.pdf



This kind of melodic line is found in lots of solos. In fact you should notice a conspicuous absence of scales - conjunct, step-wise motion - rather you will see a lot of disjunct motion on chord tones.



Keep in mind that when a seventh chord is filled in with passing tones it will produce a full octave scale at which point we can't really make a clear distinction between chord based or scale based although the majority of the material will most likely display chord tone based lines. This filling in a broken chord with non-chord tones was to main point of your earlier question Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz chord-scales?.




Compare to John Coltrane's solo on So What for a modal approach that appears more scale based. I have to show a longer excerpt to reflect the very long harmonic rhythm of one chord for many bars...



enter image description here



...notice the long lines of step-wise motion (scalar playing) and there are two phrases that encompass a full octave of straight scale lines. This is an example of scales in modal jazz.






share|improve this answer

























  • not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:48












  • a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

    – pro
    Apr 17 at 20:52











  • @pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:54











  • @foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

    – Some_Guy
    Apr 17 at 21:01







  • 1





    @foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

    – Michael Curtis
    Apr 17 at 21:20















7














Traditional jazz - roughly 1930's to 1950's - based improvisation on embellished arpeggios which followed the chord changes of a song.



Modal jazz moved away from arpeggios on rapid chord changes and focused more on scales as the basis of improvisation.



Later in the 1970's chord/scale system emerged as a way to teach jazz.



A huge list of jazz greats didn't use the chord/scale system.



In that great jazz past, when someone improvised over ii V I, using arpeggios, were they thinking about the "parent key?" Maybe. It's hard to know exactly what they thought. But, we have records and transcripts of solos to know what they played. It can be tricky to talk about inextricably linked ideas like scale/key/chord/melody, even trickier to get inside a past musician's head to know what they thought.



You might want to get improvisation transcriptions of particular solos that you want to emulate and then analyse the music... then try asking questions about how they may have conceptualized what they were playing.




EDIT



Below is one bar from a Charlie Parker solo transcript...



enter image description here



...the phrase can be analyzed as an arpeggio - broken chord, if that term is preferred - embellished with non-chord tones which I circled in red: an appoggiatura high D and two passing tones B and low D.



The full transcript is at http://www.jasonstillman.com/uploads/3/0/2/8/3028328/charlie_parker_cherokee.pdf



This kind of melodic line is found in lots of solos. In fact you should notice a conspicuous absence of scales - conjunct, step-wise motion - rather you will see a lot of disjunct motion on chord tones.



Keep in mind that when a seventh chord is filled in with passing tones it will produce a full octave scale at which point we can't really make a clear distinction between chord based or scale based although the majority of the material will most likely display chord tone based lines. This filling in a broken chord with non-chord tones was to main point of your earlier question Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz chord-scales?.




Compare to John Coltrane's solo on So What for a modal approach that appears more scale based. I have to show a longer excerpt to reflect the very long harmonic rhythm of one chord for many bars...



enter image description here



...notice the long lines of step-wise motion (scalar playing) and there are two phrases that encompass a full octave of straight scale lines. This is an example of scales in modal jazz.






share|improve this answer

























  • not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:48












  • a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

    – pro
    Apr 17 at 20:52











  • @pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:54











  • @foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

    – Some_Guy
    Apr 17 at 21:01







  • 1





    @foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

    – Michael Curtis
    Apr 17 at 21:20













7












7








7







Traditional jazz - roughly 1930's to 1950's - based improvisation on embellished arpeggios which followed the chord changes of a song.



Modal jazz moved away from arpeggios on rapid chord changes and focused more on scales as the basis of improvisation.



Later in the 1970's chord/scale system emerged as a way to teach jazz.



A huge list of jazz greats didn't use the chord/scale system.



In that great jazz past, when someone improvised over ii V I, using arpeggios, were they thinking about the "parent key?" Maybe. It's hard to know exactly what they thought. But, we have records and transcripts of solos to know what they played. It can be tricky to talk about inextricably linked ideas like scale/key/chord/melody, even trickier to get inside a past musician's head to know what they thought.



You might want to get improvisation transcriptions of particular solos that you want to emulate and then analyse the music... then try asking questions about how they may have conceptualized what they were playing.




EDIT



Below is one bar from a Charlie Parker solo transcript...



enter image description here



...the phrase can be analyzed as an arpeggio - broken chord, if that term is preferred - embellished with non-chord tones which I circled in red: an appoggiatura high D and two passing tones B and low D.



The full transcript is at http://www.jasonstillman.com/uploads/3/0/2/8/3028328/charlie_parker_cherokee.pdf



This kind of melodic line is found in lots of solos. In fact you should notice a conspicuous absence of scales - conjunct, step-wise motion - rather you will see a lot of disjunct motion on chord tones.



Keep in mind that when a seventh chord is filled in with passing tones it will produce a full octave scale at which point we can't really make a clear distinction between chord based or scale based although the majority of the material will most likely display chord tone based lines. This filling in a broken chord with non-chord tones was to main point of your earlier question Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz chord-scales?.




Compare to John Coltrane's solo on So What for a modal approach that appears more scale based. I have to show a longer excerpt to reflect the very long harmonic rhythm of one chord for many bars...



enter image description here



...notice the long lines of step-wise motion (scalar playing) and there are two phrases that encompass a full octave of straight scale lines. This is an example of scales in modal jazz.






share|improve this answer















Traditional jazz - roughly 1930's to 1950's - based improvisation on embellished arpeggios which followed the chord changes of a song.



Modal jazz moved away from arpeggios on rapid chord changes and focused more on scales as the basis of improvisation.



Later in the 1970's chord/scale system emerged as a way to teach jazz.



A huge list of jazz greats didn't use the chord/scale system.



In that great jazz past, when someone improvised over ii V I, using arpeggios, were they thinking about the "parent key?" Maybe. It's hard to know exactly what they thought. But, we have records and transcripts of solos to know what they played. It can be tricky to talk about inextricably linked ideas like scale/key/chord/melody, even trickier to get inside a past musician's head to know what they thought.



You might want to get improvisation transcriptions of particular solos that you want to emulate and then analyse the music... then try asking questions about how they may have conceptualized what they were playing.




EDIT



Below is one bar from a Charlie Parker solo transcript...



enter image description here



...the phrase can be analyzed as an arpeggio - broken chord, if that term is preferred - embellished with non-chord tones which I circled in red: an appoggiatura high D and two passing tones B and low D.



The full transcript is at http://www.jasonstillman.com/uploads/3/0/2/8/3028328/charlie_parker_cherokee.pdf



This kind of melodic line is found in lots of solos. In fact you should notice a conspicuous absence of scales - conjunct, step-wise motion - rather you will see a lot of disjunct motion on chord tones.



Keep in mind that when a seventh chord is filled in with passing tones it will produce a full octave scale at which point we can't really make a clear distinction between chord based or scale based although the majority of the material will most likely display chord tone based lines. This filling in a broken chord with non-chord tones was to main point of your earlier question Whole-step technique for figuring out jazz chord-scales?.




Compare to John Coltrane's solo on So What for a modal approach that appears more scale based. I have to show a longer excerpt to reflect the very long harmonic rhythm of one chord for many bars...



enter image description here



...notice the long lines of step-wise motion (scalar playing) and there are two phrases that encompass a full octave of straight scale lines. This is an example of scales in modal jazz.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 17 at 22:23

























answered Apr 17 at 20:29









Michael CurtisMichael Curtis

12.6k946




12.6k946












  • not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:48












  • a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

    – pro
    Apr 17 at 20:52











  • @pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:54











  • @foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

    – Some_Guy
    Apr 17 at 21:01







  • 1





    @foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

    – Michael Curtis
    Apr 17 at 21:20

















  • not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:48












  • a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

    – pro
    Apr 17 at 20:52











  • @pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

    – foreyez
    Apr 17 at 20:54











  • @foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

    – Some_Guy
    Apr 17 at 21:01







  • 1





    @foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

    – Michael Curtis
    Apr 17 at 21:20
















not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:48






not sure what you mean by 'arpeggios'. arpeggios as in chords? might need a super simple example for traditional versus modal.

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:48














a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

– pro
Apr 17 at 20:52





a chord typically means all the notes are played at once. an arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time.

– pro
Apr 17 at 20:52













@pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:54





@pro yes I know but I mean, what were they arpeggiating in traditional jazz exactly?

– foreyez
Apr 17 at 20:54













@foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

– Some_Guy
Apr 17 at 21:01






@foreyez something that approximated or implied a chord progression of the song. But not in a strict fashion, and generally done by ear not based on any chord sheets. And different players relied on this technique more or less than others. For example listen to the solos on this record. At points there is clear reliance on melodic content that dances around arpeggios (especially in satchmo's playing), but there is also a fair amount of other stuff going on too youtube.com/watch?v=544wGNkZcm8

– Some_Guy
Apr 17 at 21:01





1




1





@foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

– Michael Curtis
Apr 17 at 21:20





@foreyez, I made an edit re. "...what were they arpeggiating...?"

– Michael Curtis
Apr 17 at 21:20











6














Yes, some jazz musicians improvise on the key, especially when they are improvising from the melody, not the chords (harmony).



The advantage of improvising on the harmony is that you minimize the clashing notes and have a ready palette of color notes that come from ornamenting the underlying chord.



But some jazz musicians improvise entirely from the melody, such as Bill Frisell. In this case, improvising on the key gives you a distinct advantage, because you can concentrate on deconstructing and reconstructing melodic fragments.



Keep in mind that in a given melody, even if it is in a particular key, there may be key centers that suggest different keys within the same tune. For example, even if you improvise on a particular key, different sections may have different modes based on the melody (key signature) scale.



For example, for a tune in the key of D major, the first section might be D Ionian but a different section might be in A Mixolydian. Same key signature, different scales. In a different mode you concentrate on different notes. So in my example, your "strong" notes (1, 3, 5) and chords (I, ii, IV, V, vi) in D Ionian are going to be different than in A Mixolydian.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Dom
    Apr 18 at 12:52















6














Yes, some jazz musicians improvise on the key, especially when they are improvising from the melody, not the chords (harmony).



The advantage of improvising on the harmony is that you minimize the clashing notes and have a ready palette of color notes that come from ornamenting the underlying chord.



But some jazz musicians improvise entirely from the melody, such as Bill Frisell. In this case, improvising on the key gives you a distinct advantage, because you can concentrate on deconstructing and reconstructing melodic fragments.



Keep in mind that in a given melody, even if it is in a particular key, there may be key centers that suggest different keys within the same tune. For example, even if you improvise on a particular key, different sections may have different modes based on the melody (key signature) scale.



For example, for a tune in the key of D major, the first section might be D Ionian but a different section might be in A Mixolydian. Same key signature, different scales. In a different mode you concentrate on different notes. So in my example, your "strong" notes (1, 3, 5) and chords (I, ii, IV, V, vi) in D Ionian are going to be different than in A Mixolydian.






share|improve this answer

























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Dom
    Apr 18 at 12:52













6












6








6







Yes, some jazz musicians improvise on the key, especially when they are improvising from the melody, not the chords (harmony).



The advantage of improvising on the harmony is that you minimize the clashing notes and have a ready palette of color notes that come from ornamenting the underlying chord.



But some jazz musicians improvise entirely from the melody, such as Bill Frisell. In this case, improvising on the key gives you a distinct advantage, because you can concentrate on deconstructing and reconstructing melodic fragments.



Keep in mind that in a given melody, even if it is in a particular key, there may be key centers that suggest different keys within the same tune. For example, even if you improvise on a particular key, different sections may have different modes based on the melody (key signature) scale.



For example, for a tune in the key of D major, the first section might be D Ionian but a different section might be in A Mixolydian. Same key signature, different scales. In a different mode you concentrate on different notes. So in my example, your "strong" notes (1, 3, 5) and chords (I, ii, IV, V, vi) in D Ionian are going to be different than in A Mixolydian.






share|improve this answer















Yes, some jazz musicians improvise on the key, especially when they are improvising from the melody, not the chords (harmony).



The advantage of improvising on the harmony is that you minimize the clashing notes and have a ready palette of color notes that come from ornamenting the underlying chord.



But some jazz musicians improvise entirely from the melody, such as Bill Frisell. In this case, improvising on the key gives you a distinct advantage, because you can concentrate on deconstructing and reconstructing melodic fragments.



Keep in mind that in a given melody, even if it is in a particular key, there may be key centers that suggest different keys within the same tune. For example, even if you improvise on a particular key, different sections may have different modes based on the melody (key signature) scale.



For example, for a tune in the key of D major, the first section might be D Ionian but a different section might be in A Mixolydian. Same key signature, different scales. In a different mode you concentrate on different notes. So in my example, your "strong" notes (1, 3, 5) and chords (I, ii, IV, V, vi) in D Ionian are going to be different than in A Mixolydian.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 17 at 22:40

























answered Apr 17 at 20:27









propro

7,0772159




7,0772159












  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Dom
    Apr 18 at 12:52

















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

    – Dom
    Apr 18 at 12:52
















Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– Dom
Apr 18 at 12:52





Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.

– Dom
Apr 18 at 12:52











3














I think you are asking whether what you call the pop approach to improvising—finding a common scale/key that works over many chords in sequence—is valid in jazz. The simple answer is yes. Indeed, learning to spot common scales and tones is an important hurdle that many musicians trained to think chord by chord learn to overcome in college.



In the example you've given, a ii-V7-I in C major, note that the scales you derive when thinking about the changes individually actually consist of the same collections of notes:



  • Dm will be a D dorian, which contains the same notes as C major
    (ionian).

  • G7 will be G mixolydian, also equivalent to C ionian.

  • Over the C, you're actually likely to use the ionian mode in this context. (The
    lydian may be used if you have an extended vamp on this passage or
    for a more "modern" sound, but it's perfectly valid to use ionian as
    long as you don't attempt to resolve on the F.)

Thus, if you are simply looking for a collection of notes that works well over all these chords, then C ionian (C major) will certainly do the trick. Of course, jazz songs are more likely than pop songs to switch key centers quickly, but you can still use the same approach. If you have a chord progression like



Dm G7 C %
Fm Bb7 Eb %


you can play C major over the first four bars and, by similar logic, Eb major over the next four bars.



This is called the key-centers approach.



If the key-centers approach is valid, why do books on jazz improvisation often ask you to think about the chords individually (which is called the modal approach)? Two reasons, both (in my opinion) pedagogical.



First, beginner musicians tend to be biased towards the first few notes in a scale. If you tell a student that the C major scale is valid over the progression Dm G7 C, they will often just repeat patterns involving the notes C, D, and E. Asking the student to think about these as three different chords guides them to other parts of the scale. The same student, thinking about G mixolydian over the G7 chord, now will center their playing around G, A, and B instead. This is still less than perfect, of course, but it's a teaching strategy designed to encourage students to explore the full range of the scale.



Second, and related, is that while all the notes in the C major scale are broadly compatible with these chords, the color and stability of the individual notes depends on what chord you're on. The note F sounds great over a Dm chord; not so much over a C major (although if you move quickly down to E it's fine). When you think about the modes separately, you may be able to spot the stable notes—like 1, 3, and 5—more quickly.






share|improve this answer























  • I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

    – BiAiB
    Apr 19 at 9:20











  • Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

    – Max Kapur
    Apr 21 at 22:51















3














I think you are asking whether what you call the pop approach to improvising—finding a common scale/key that works over many chords in sequence—is valid in jazz. The simple answer is yes. Indeed, learning to spot common scales and tones is an important hurdle that many musicians trained to think chord by chord learn to overcome in college.



In the example you've given, a ii-V7-I in C major, note that the scales you derive when thinking about the changes individually actually consist of the same collections of notes:



  • Dm will be a D dorian, which contains the same notes as C major
    (ionian).

  • G7 will be G mixolydian, also equivalent to C ionian.

  • Over the C, you're actually likely to use the ionian mode in this context. (The
    lydian may be used if you have an extended vamp on this passage or
    for a more "modern" sound, but it's perfectly valid to use ionian as
    long as you don't attempt to resolve on the F.)

Thus, if you are simply looking for a collection of notes that works well over all these chords, then C ionian (C major) will certainly do the trick. Of course, jazz songs are more likely than pop songs to switch key centers quickly, but you can still use the same approach. If you have a chord progression like



Dm G7 C %
Fm Bb7 Eb %


you can play C major over the first four bars and, by similar logic, Eb major over the next four bars.



This is called the key-centers approach.



If the key-centers approach is valid, why do books on jazz improvisation often ask you to think about the chords individually (which is called the modal approach)? Two reasons, both (in my opinion) pedagogical.



First, beginner musicians tend to be biased towards the first few notes in a scale. If you tell a student that the C major scale is valid over the progression Dm G7 C, they will often just repeat patterns involving the notes C, D, and E. Asking the student to think about these as three different chords guides them to other parts of the scale. The same student, thinking about G mixolydian over the G7 chord, now will center their playing around G, A, and B instead. This is still less than perfect, of course, but it's a teaching strategy designed to encourage students to explore the full range of the scale.



Second, and related, is that while all the notes in the C major scale are broadly compatible with these chords, the color and stability of the individual notes depends on what chord you're on. The note F sounds great over a Dm chord; not so much over a C major (although if you move quickly down to E it's fine). When you think about the modes separately, you may be able to spot the stable notes—like 1, 3, and 5—more quickly.






share|improve this answer























  • I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

    – BiAiB
    Apr 19 at 9:20











  • Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

    – Max Kapur
    Apr 21 at 22:51













3












3








3







I think you are asking whether what you call the pop approach to improvising—finding a common scale/key that works over many chords in sequence—is valid in jazz. The simple answer is yes. Indeed, learning to spot common scales and tones is an important hurdle that many musicians trained to think chord by chord learn to overcome in college.



In the example you've given, a ii-V7-I in C major, note that the scales you derive when thinking about the changes individually actually consist of the same collections of notes:



  • Dm will be a D dorian, which contains the same notes as C major
    (ionian).

  • G7 will be G mixolydian, also equivalent to C ionian.

  • Over the C, you're actually likely to use the ionian mode in this context. (The
    lydian may be used if you have an extended vamp on this passage or
    for a more "modern" sound, but it's perfectly valid to use ionian as
    long as you don't attempt to resolve on the F.)

Thus, if you are simply looking for a collection of notes that works well over all these chords, then C ionian (C major) will certainly do the trick. Of course, jazz songs are more likely than pop songs to switch key centers quickly, but you can still use the same approach. If you have a chord progression like



Dm G7 C %
Fm Bb7 Eb %


you can play C major over the first four bars and, by similar logic, Eb major over the next four bars.



This is called the key-centers approach.



If the key-centers approach is valid, why do books on jazz improvisation often ask you to think about the chords individually (which is called the modal approach)? Two reasons, both (in my opinion) pedagogical.



First, beginner musicians tend to be biased towards the first few notes in a scale. If you tell a student that the C major scale is valid over the progression Dm G7 C, they will often just repeat patterns involving the notes C, D, and E. Asking the student to think about these as three different chords guides them to other parts of the scale. The same student, thinking about G mixolydian over the G7 chord, now will center their playing around G, A, and B instead. This is still less than perfect, of course, but it's a teaching strategy designed to encourage students to explore the full range of the scale.



Second, and related, is that while all the notes in the C major scale are broadly compatible with these chords, the color and stability of the individual notes depends on what chord you're on. The note F sounds great over a Dm chord; not so much over a C major (although if you move quickly down to E it's fine). When you think about the modes separately, you may be able to spot the stable notes—like 1, 3, and 5—more quickly.






share|improve this answer













I think you are asking whether what you call the pop approach to improvising—finding a common scale/key that works over many chords in sequence—is valid in jazz. The simple answer is yes. Indeed, learning to spot common scales and tones is an important hurdle that many musicians trained to think chord by chord learn to overcome in college.



In the example you've given, a ii-V7-I in C major, note that the scales you derive when thinking about the changes individually actually consist of the same collections of notes:



  • Dm will be a D dorian, which contains the same notes as C major
    (ionian).

  • G7 will be G mixolydian, also equivalent to C ionian.

  • Over the C, you're actually likely to use the ionian mode in this context. (The
    lydian may be used if you have an extended vamp on this passage or
    for a more "modern" sound, but it's perfectly valid to use ionian as
    long as you don't attempt to resolve on the F.)

Thus, if you are simply looking for a collection of notes that works well over all these chords, then C ionian (C major) will certainly do the trick. Of course, jazz songs are more likely than pop songs to switch key centers quickly, but you can still use the same approach. If you have a chord progression like



Dm G7 C %
Fm Bb7 Eb %


you can play C major over the first four bars and, by similar logic, Eb major over the next four bars.



This is called the key-centers approach.



If the key-centers approach is valid, why do books on jazz improvisation often ask you to think about the chords individually (which is called the modal approach)? Two reasons, both (in my opinion) pedagogical.



First, beginner musicians tend to be biased towards the first few notes in a scale. If you tell a student that the C major scale is valid over the progression Dm G7 C, they will often just repeat patterns involving the notes C, D, and E. Asking the student to think about these as three different chords guides them to other parts of the scale. The same student, thinking about G mixolydian over the G7 chord, now will center their playing around G, A, and B instead. This is still less than perfect, of course, but it's a teaching strategy designed to encourage students to explore the full range of the scale.



Second, and related, is that while all the notes in the C major scale are broadly compatible with these chords, the color and stability of the individual notes depends on what chord you're on. The note F sounds great over a Dm chord; not so much over a C major (although if you move quickly down to E it's fine). When you think about the modes separately, you may be able to spot the stable notes—like 1, 3, and 5—more quickly.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 17 at 23:09









Max KapurMax Kapur

3413




3413












  • I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

    – BiAiB
    Apr 19 at 9:20











  • Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

    – Max Kapur
    Apr 21 at 22:51

















  • I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

    – BiAiB
    Apr 19 at 9:20











  • Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

    – Max Kapur
    Apr 21 at 22:51
















I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

– BiAiB
Apr 19 at 9:20





I tried to edit the Bb7 fingering but it seems to be generated wrong (the 4th fret should be 3rd, otherwise its a Bb7sus4)

– BiAiB
Apr 19 at 9:20













Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

– Max Kapur
Apr 21 at 22:51





Yeah, I don't know what those guitar diagrams are about. I just entered the chord symbols and they came up automatically.

– Max Kapur
Apr 21 at 22:51

















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