CHROMATIC TONALITY AND ALL 7 MODES MODULATIONS OVER THE RHYTMIC AND HARMONIC PATTERN OF 12-BARS BLUES.
In the blues (that may be somehow considered a type of rapsody concept collective composition and improvisation) the rhythm is also standardized to e.g. 12-bars blues, which corelated the rhyrhmic measures with the sequence and duration of the 3 chords 1M, 4M 5M or 1M 2m 5M.
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It is standard in tonal harmony that we may substitute a chord with another which is usually one of its minor relative chords.
Thus here in this pattern we may substitute
1M with 6m or 3m 4M with 6m or 2m e.g. if we substitute 4M with 2m then
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And we may subtitute
5M with 3m or 7d
But more generally in chromatic tonality we may substitute one of the basic 3chords with some ofthe chords of the chromatic tonality thus we may substitute
1M with 3M or 6M (besides 3m, 6m)
4M with 2M or 6 M (Besides 2m, 6m)
5M with 3M or 7M. (besides, 3m, 7d)
e.g.
When making the substititutionw it is good to keep the rule of the previous article, that is
60% harmonic chord transitions, 30% melodic transitions, 10% superchromatic transitions.
As alternative methods we have that the chord progression of the 12 bars blues can be shifted to all the 7 modes ofthe diatonic scale, so that it can produce different tonal or chrmatic tonal 12-bars blues
Here are all the 7 modes of the chord progression for the 12 bars blues
IONIAN 1M 4M 1M 5M 1M
DORIAN 2m 5M 2m 6m 2m
FRYFIAN 3m 6m 3m 7d 3m
LYDIAN 4M 7bM 4M 1M 4M (chromatic tonality because of the 7b)
MIXOLYDIAN 5M 1M 5M 2m 5M
AEOLIAN 6m 2m 6m 3m 6m
LOCTIAN 7d 3m 7d 4#M 7d (chromatic tonality because of the 4#)
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