Posts tagged MTM 01-30
MTM | 30

Sus Chords vs add9 & add11 Chords

This lesson is about comparing sus2 and sus4 to add9 and add11 chords. The next lesson will really solidify which add9 and add11 chords fit in a key. I was going to attach a chart, but we'll work through it in the next lesson.

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MTM | 29

Sus Chords II | How They Fit In A Key

In this lesson, I discuss one of the weird quirks of sus chords and also how they fit in a key. I mentioned in this video that I'd be happy to do a quick livestream about how it sounds to jam out a rhythm part using sus chords. If you'd like me to do that, let me know in the comments or on the next Office Hours and I'll come back and link the examples here.

Check out the attached cheat sheet if you want to remember which sus chords fit on I, ii, iii, IV, V, vi

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MTM | 28

Intro To sus Chords

In this lesson, I help you distinguish between sus2 and sus4 chords. We also dive into specifically how to make them and discuss the difficulty with using certain chord shapes to make sus chords. Get to know these foundational concepts well before the next lesson, where we'll talk about sus chords in a key and start preparing for the main difference between sus chords and add9 or add11 chords.

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MTM | 27

Power Chords & Magic Eye Puzzles

In this lesson I discuss the idea of power chords. They are a lot more than just an "easy" version of a "normal chord." Removing crucial information from the chord (the third) can make the waters a lot more murky, especially if you stick to I IV and V, but there are other interesting situations, too.

Your homework is:

1. Experiment with the attached backing track by playing a major scale, minor scale, or other combinations I mention in the video. See if you can make the backing track sound like it is playing the chords you imagine by emphasizing the thirds of the chords. Keep it to Major and Minor chords for this homework.

2. Write your own power chord progressions using more than just I, IV, & V. See if you can hear the progression in a major or minor key.

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MTM | 26

More Reharmonization

This is the final reharmonization lesson. I wanted to talk about this idea that pretty much any chord in the key can work over the melody, but I wanted to map it out and show names of chords as well as a few fun examples. I went on a few (hopefully useful) tangents but they were all related to this idea that the chords and melody can combine to create a complex cool set of chords, even if you're just playing the same chord over and over.

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MTM | 25

Reharmonization with 7th Chords

In this lesson, I get a little fancier than I did in the previous Reharmonization lesson by using 7th chords, V of __ chords, and some other sneakiness. Check out the scratch paper and 7th chord cheat sheet attached at the bottom.

Your community forum homework for this little lesson is:
1. Write a chord progression for this melody that feels in the key of C Major or A Minor (or both)

2. Write a chord progression that feels weird and NOT in a key. Make it ugly if you like but make sure you're always harmonizing the melody!

3. Start with the standard progression (in grey in the example section) and substitute new chords as you see fit.

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MTM | 24

Reharmonization Basics

This is a lot more fun than it sounds! In this lesson, I take a simple tune (Twinkle Tinkle) and completely rearrange the chords. This is your entry into reharmonization! Check out the Cheat Sheet, the Scratch Paper, and jam tracks that go with this lesson.

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MTM | 23

Minor Progressions that Feel in Key

In this lesson, I'm taking a similar approach to the previous lessons, MTM 21 & 22. I'm exploring which chords feel good together and then how to substitute or add in funkier chords to spice up your progressions. Minor Keys have a lot of variations and alterations, not to mention the modal options we cover, so this one is heavy.

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MTM | 22

Progressions That Feel In Key, Pt 2

In this lesson we continue where we left off on the previous lesson: Taking basic Major Key chord progressions and substituting chords to make the progression more interesting.

We go a step further in this lesson with secondary dominants and how to make them feel like they belong in the key, as well as some mixolydian substitutions. We talk a bit about Lydian substitutions too.

This whole lesson is about exploring and getting to know the Major Key. At the end you get a nice little cheat sheet for writing major chord progressions. Hopefully with this lesson and the previous one you'll have a little more familiarity with how to make a major chord progression "feel" like it's in key, or you'll be able to deliberately muddy the waters if you don't want it to be obvious which key you're in.

General homework ideas for the community forum:

1. Write some basic 7th chord progressions that convince the listener you're in right key

2. Write some chord progressions that muddy the waters so your listener might struggle to figure out the key

3. Write some basic progressions using I IV V, then substitute for relative minors. THEN, on a second line, swap out the diatonic (standard) chords for a few others (like secondary dominants or mixolydian stuff.)

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MTM | 21

Progressions That Feel In Key

Writing chord progressions is (in my opinion) at the core of understanding music theory, making sense of ear training, and learning to write music. In this lesson, I talk about how the simple set of 7 chords (I ii iii IV V vi vii°) can sometimes lead you to astray and make your audience think you're NOT in the key you intended to be. I experiment with how to make a chord progression "feel" like it's in the right key

This lesson will hopefully give you a better understanding of and more familiarity with the Major Key. You'll also get a better sense of how to write chord progressions that pull the listener to the I chord, and you'll have a nice writing method where you start with a basic progression and then substitute chords to make it more interesting.

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MTM | 20

Noodling Is Important!

In this lesson I talk about noodling - what it is first, then how to use it to "hear what you sound like." From there I give some strategies for how to gradually get from the mindful, deliberate mindset where effective practice happens, to the place where you can implement that stuff in the flow state of noodling. Essentially, if you train your noodly autopilot, you can get to a place where you're taking a solo without having to think too hard about it! This takes practice, and this lesson is about how to practice that.

Here are my jam tracks SPJ Jam tracks

The previous MTM lessons were all about deliberately and purposefully making melodies - this lesson is about leaving that alone sometimes and just flowing.

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MTM | 19

Melody Arrangement

In this third melody-writing lesson (check out lesson 1 and 2) I get into how to arrange melodic phrases into sets. Things start sounding a lot more like a melody from a song, especially when we tackle C Phrases. I get into details about how to arrange melodic phrases over a handful of different chord progressions, including how to sneakily play the same melody over two separate chords!

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MTM | 18

Melody Morphs

In this lesson, we get more specific about those primordial melodies we made in the previous MTM. Using the Melody Morphs sheet (attached), I walk you through how to create an A phrase and a B phrase with some sneaky techniques. I hinted at C phrases, but we'll get into that in another lesson.

Have fun making melodies using Add, Subtract, Flip, Change and Relocate and post your discoveries on thecommunity forum post for this lesson.

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MTM | 17

Melody Making Basics

In this lesson, I get into the basics of melody making: building melodic phrases. Rules are meant to be broken pretty much all the time in music, but I lay down some nice simple guidelines for how to create melodic phrases using the Melody Quick Scratch Paper.

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MTM | 16

Why Pentatonic? Part 2

In this little part 2 lesson, I talk about how old the Pentatonic Scale is (hint: REALLY OLD) and how the Major Scale and the Pentatonic scale kind of play a similar role in melody making - you get to pick and choose. I then assign a little homework based on this lesson.

If you'd like to post said homework, related notes and noodling, or further questions on the topic, visit the community post for this lesson.

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MTM | 15

Why Pentatonic? Part 1

In this lesson, I discuss how cool it is that nearly every mode fits into the CAGED pentatonic scale shapes and how pretty much everything you're going to play can start with the pentatonic scale and get more complex from there. Then I talk about one common situation where you're likely to have to reach way outside the pentatonic scale to find chord tones - a harmonic minor i - V chord progression.

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MTM | 14

Phrygian, Mode Mixing, and Repetition

In this lesson we get familiar with Phrygian Mode and how cool and weird it is - then we talk about the various ways to use the chord set from Phrygian mode, how to mix and match chords from other minor modes, and how to think about soloing over those progressions.

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MTM | 13

More Blues

In this MTM I discuss theory that is not exclusive to the blues, but tonally related. I introduce a few ideas about bending - how you always want to think about bending TO a note - and a few thoughts about how “The Blues Scale” is or isn’t directly related to the Blues depending on how you use it or look at it. I also get into this bluesy idea of playing a minor pentatonic scale over the IV chord in a major key - stealing a blues concept and plopping it into a non-bluesy song. Sometimes it sounds awesome and sometimes it sounds a little too risky!

Jam Tracks linked here:

E Major I - IV Jam Track

C Major I - IV Jam Track

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MTM | 12

Blues Tonality

In this lesson I dig into the essence of what makes the 12 bar blues so bluesy: using dominant chords for the I - IV and V chord instead of just for the V chord as in traditional music theory. This is the first time I’ve dug into the blues on Patreon so I spend a bit of time talking about the tonality of the turn around, how the 12 bars typically lay out, and how to think about soloing over the progression depending if you want to sound like a traditional bendy blues player as well as some other ways to approach the chord progression. We also talk about a #9 chord, which makes me think it’s about time to start on a Rubik’s cube series for 9 chords.

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MTM | 11

Mixolydian Mode

n this lesson, I discuss the two ways to think about modes - specifically Mixolydian mode. One way to think of it is as a Major Scale with a flat 7, and another way to think of it is if we create a new scale starting on the 5th note of a major scale. There are some fun chord progressions to be made in mixolydian mode, but we can also borrow mixolydian progressions for our major key progressions. I demonstrate what mixolydian sounds like and show examples of a few popular songs that use mixolydian mode. This is also related to the blues in some sense, while also distinctly being its own thing.

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