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Harmony
- Harmonizing the Lydian Scale
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Published
March 8th, 2003. © Chris Juergensen/chrisjuergensen.com.
All Rights Reserved.
This
lesson has been revised and published in THE
INFINITE GUITAR. Info
>>>
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Harmonizing
Scales - When I was in music school my
teacher gave me this homework assignment: He
wanted me to take a scale and make seven chord
voicings using all seven scale notes separately
as the top note in each individual chord. I
know, your confused, I just read the last sentence
and I'm confused too. I'll explain a little
more. Let's take a lydian scale, a descending
E lydian scale to be exact. The first chord
we construct from the scale will have as the
top note the root, in this case an E note on
the 12th fret of the first string. The next
chord's top note will be the 7th (a D# note)
on the 11th fret. After that, the top note on
the first string will become the 6th (C#) on
the 9th fret and so on until we get back to
the root. Other than the top note in each individual
chord and the root (E) on the bottom, all the
other notes in each chord can be anything that
pleases your ear as long as they can be found
in the E lydian scale. This exercise was designed
to help you learn how to construct your own
chord voicings and at the same time increase
your chord vocabulary.
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The
Descending E Lydian Scale
Take
a look at and play the descending E lydian scale
below. We are going to find a chord voicing
for every note in the descending scale. Why
the lydian scale rather than the major scale
you ask? Because the lydian scale is just plain
better than the major scale for building major
chords. The problem with the major scale is
that the natural 4th and major 3rd rub against
each other and bug the listener's ears when
they both get included in the same chord voicing.
For this reason, when you make chord voicings
from the major scale you always have to be careful
of combining the 3rd and 4th (although it is
technically against the rules, it can be done
by placing the 3rd way above the 4th in the
chord voicing). With the lydian scale you don't
have to worry about any of that. The raised
11th gets along fine with the 3rd and any other
note in the scale for that matter.
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Coming
up with the chords - Let's build the first
chord. We already know what the top note will
be for this chord (the 12th fret E note on the
first string). We also know what the bottom
note will be (since we are in E, we can just
use the open 6th string. Only this note on the
sixth string will stay constant throughout the
whole process). What we haven't decided are
the notes in between the first and the sixth
string. You'll need to use a combination of
your theory knowledge and your ear to work this
one out. Technically any note in the E lydian
scale will work OK. Since the top note on the
E string has already been decided, all you have
to work on are the notes on the 4th, 3rd and
2nd strings (let's leave out the fifth string).
Try some different notes at random and let your
ears decide which combination is best. Remember,
the root as the top voice on the first string
has already been predetermined so you should
choose from any of the other notes (3, 5, 7,
9, #11, 13). If you need to, use the chart below
as a reference.
| note |
E
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F#
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G#
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A#
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B
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C#
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D#
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| chord/scale
tone |
1
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2
(9)
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3
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#4
(#11)
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5
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6
(13)
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7
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| Examples
- Here are a few examples of some voicings you
could make: |
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| 1.
A super simple E69 chord. Nothing fancy here,
just the standard voicing with the root up on
top. |
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Voicing:
1, 6, 9, 5, 1
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| 2.
Another E69 chord. This one like the last one
is still sticking to our rule of keeping the root
as its top voice but unlike the previous example,
the 5th has been replaced with the 3rd on the
second string. Not a typical 69 voicing. |
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Voicing:
1, 6, 9, 3, 1
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| 3.
The only thing this voicing has in common with
the first example is the root on the first string
and the 9th on the third string. The raised 11th
gives this chord a slightly more complex sound.
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Voicing:
1, 5, 9, #11, 1
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4.
The most complex sounding of all the examples,
this one has nothing in common with the first
voicing other than the root on top.
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Voicing:
1, 5, 7, #11, 1
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| After
we determine which voicing we like the best as
our first chord, we can go on and work on our
next E major voicing which will have to have the
7th on the 11th fret of the first string as its
top voice. The process continues until we have
a voicing for each scale tone in the descending
scale. |
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| I
came up with these chord voicings below.
Some things to take notice of: |
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| 1.
The first and fourth voicing are the same
shapes played in different positions (Funny
how they both end up being 69 chords) |
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| 2.
Like the two previous chords, the sixth
and seventh chord voicings are also the
same shapes but unlike the previous example
they make two very different chords ( a
Emaj13#11 and E69 chord to be exact). |
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| 3.
Check out how the combination of the wide
and close intervals in the third chord voicing
give it a unique sound. |
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| 4.
The root on top of the chord pleases the
ear and gives the feeling of complete resolution
(last chord voicing). |
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Voicing:
1, 6, 9, 5, 1
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Voicing:
1, 5, 9, 3, 7
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Voicing:
1, #11, 7, 1, 6
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Voicing:
1, 3, 6, 9, 5
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Voicing:
1, 5, 1, 9, #11
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Voicing:
1, #11, 13, 7, 3
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Voicing:
1, 3, 5, 6, 9
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Voicing:
1, 9, 3, 7, 1
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Little
did I know that ten years later I would use
this exercise to make a song that would be the
title cut on my very first solo CD. Click
here to hear it.
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Prospects
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| Try
this exercise using some other scales and see
what kind of voicings you can come up with. |
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Have
a question or a suggestion for a lesson, e-mail
chris.
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