ripock
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I am in the process of getting back to my roots and get re-centered on my, and the western world’s, musicality with the pentatonic.
Perhaps it is a testament to my progress, but there seems to be more that I do not know than before. I attribute that to the old Sokratic saw of gnothi seauton. I now know more and being more secure in my knowledge and I am equally cognizant of what I don’t know.
And what I don’t know is my major pentatonic. I know on an intellectual level that the major pentatonic is the minor pentatonic of the relative major of the key you’re in. Since I work in E, that would be C# for my relative major. So if I play C# minor pentatonic, I am playing E major pentatonic. However that knowledge doesn’t translate to musical knowledge. There is too much cogitation going on. I cannot use the E major pentatonic without some forethought. And when you’re playing music, there’s no time for that.
I can see my ignorance in my system of nomenclature. There are five shapes, or modes, of the minor pentatonic scale. I know that the guitar world just uses numbers to classify the different shapes. I don’t play guitar, so I made up my own system. I just name my shapes based on degree of the scale which they start with. In my system I refer to my shapes as the tonic, mediant, subdominant, dominant, and leading tone shapes.
And for the major pentatonic I just called the five shapes the same things although that is wildly inaccurate because the notes are different. The major pentatonic uses the tonic, supertonic, mediant, dominant, and the submediant.
So I’m thinking of them all wrong. But that’s just on a conceptual level. The main issue is the musical level. No matter what I call them, I need to move to them when improvising.
The key to the easy transitions are the tonic and dominant. Those are the only two notes that are common to the major and minor pentatonic. And to be honest, the tonic isn’t such a good choice because when you return to the tonic you are ending your musical phrase with resolution. So the real player here is the dominant because with the dominant you can switch from minor to major seamlessly.
Obviously I can change with the other notes. The only liability is that it sounds like a modulation because it is. But that’s not a bad thing. Actually it is a very strong sound that has its uses. Those switches are half steps and they are very audible but it often sounds like something important is happening.
Okay, but how do the pentatonics work with my other staples of improvisation? I love playing my D# dim7 arpeggio. The D# is in neither pentatonic, the F# is in the major pentatonic, and the A is in the minor pentatonic, with the C of the arpeggio being in neither pentatonic. So from the arpeggio I can go to either pentatonic.
And as far as my harmonic minor is concerned, it shares four notes with the minor pentatonic, and three with the major pentatonics
This is getting overwhelming. I think I am just going to focus on using B, the dominant note, to transition between major and minor pentatonics—and work in a harmonic minor mode when the occasion arises.
Perhaps it is a testament to my progress, but there seems to be more that I do not know than before. I attribute that to the old Sokratic saw of gnothi seauton. I now know more and being more secure in my knowledge and I am equally cognizant of what I don’t know.
And what I don’t know is my major pentatonic. I know on an intellectual level that the major pentatonic is the minor pentatonic of the relative major of the key you’re in. Since I work in E, that would be C# for my relative major. So if I play C# minor pentatonic, I am playing E major pentatonic. However that knowledge doesn’t translate to musical knowledge. There is too much cogitation going on. I cannot use the E major pentatonic without some forethought. And when you’re playing music, there’s no time for that.
I can see my ignorance in my system of nomenclature. There are five shapes, or modes, of the minor pentatonic scale. I know that the guitar world just uses numbers to classify the different shapes. I don’t play guitar, so I made up my own system. I just name my shapes based on degree of the scale which they start with. In my system I refer to my shapes as the tonic, mediant, subdominant, dominant, and leading tone shapes.
And for the major pentatonic I just called the five shapes the same things although that is wildly inaccurate because the notes are different. The major pentatonic uses the tonic, supertonic, mediant, dominant, and the submediant.
So I’m thinking of them all wrong. But that’s just on a conceptual level. The main issue is the musical level. No matter what I call them, I need to move to them when improvising.
The key to the easy transitions are the tonic and dominant. Those are the only two notes that are common to the major and minor pentatonic. And to be honest, the tonic isn’t such a good choice because when you return to the tonic you are ending your musical phrase with resolution. So the real player here is the dominant because with the dominant you can switch from minor to major seamlessly.
Obviously I can change with the other notes. The only liability is that it sounds like a modulation because it is. But that’s not a bad thing. Actually it is a very strong sound that has its uses. Those switches are half steps and they are very audible but it often sounds like something important is happening.
Okay, but how do the pentatonics work with my other staples of improvisation? I love playing my D# dim7 arpeggio. The D# is in neither pentatonic, the F# is in the major pentatonic, and the A is in the minor pentatonic, with the C of the arpeggio being in neither pentatonic. So from the arpeggio I can go to either pentatonic.
And as far as my harmonic minor is concerned, it shares four notes with the minor pentatonic, and three with the major pentatonics
This is getting overwhelming. I think I am just going to focus on using B, the dominant note, to transition between major and minor pentatonics—and work in a harmonic minor mode when the occasion arises.