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Saturday, August 10, 2019

262. LONGITUDINAL CHORDS: THE 5-NOTES SCALE-CLOSURE (pentachord or fivefold) OF A TRIAD CHORD FOR IMPROVISING MELODIES FITTING TO THE CHORD. ALSO A METHOD OF MELODIC IMPROVISATION OF LYRA, CELTIC HARP AND PANFLUTE.

LONGITUDINAL CHORDS:

The 5-notes (pentachord or 5-fold) methods of improvising over a triad chord with violin, lyra , panflute and Celtic harp. 

The concept of 5-fold scale-closure of atriad chord and melodic improvisation on it ,is the binding entity  of the rhythm-melody-harmony in the improvisation at least at one layer of complexity.

The fivefold is the concept of longitudinal-chord , e.g. on single string, as contrasted to the concept of transversal-chord of many strings simulteneously. 

The "arpeggios" inside such a 5-fold may be called ROTATIONS or PERMUTATIONS ofthe 5-fold.


As we have mentioned before too, a criterion if a piece of melody is fitting to an underlying or accompanying chord is if at least 50% of the time of  the melody the notes of the chord are sounding. This is not the only criterion. Let us call it the 1st criterion. Actually this is a rather strict criterion. Another more loose criterion that we call here the 2nd criterion is that the intervals created by the notes oft he melody and the chord are more than 50% intervals of 3rds 4ths, 5thsor 8ths and larger rather than intervals of 2nds.




1) GENERAL METHOD Now if we utilize only 5 notes of the full chromatic 12-notes scale 3 of which are the notes of the triad chord X, then if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X. We call this the 5-notes methods of improvising over a triad chord.

2) THE CHROMATIC INSTANCE In particular, these 5 notes maybe the closure of the chord (see post 183 CLOSURE OF A CHORD OR VECTOR-CHORD VERSUS ARPEGGIO OF A CHORD FOR IMPROVISING OVER A CHORD) or vector-chord of the chord. This is a rather chromatic method of improvising over the chord it is best when the improvisation over a chromatic minor scale. As we mentioned if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X.

3) THE MELODIC INSTANCE Another method is the melodic method of  extending the chord X by a3rd lower of the root note and a 3rd higher of the highest note.  We make sure that the extended 3rds together with the inner 3rds of the chord are laternating major-minor 3rds E.g. if the triad chord is the major C-E-G, then we extend to the A-C-E-G-B, If the triad chord is the minor A-C-E we extend to the F-A-C-E-G. As we mentioned if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X.


In addition for every such chord or chord transition we may have a morphological rhythmic pattern E.g. A1 B1 B2 B3 or A1 A2 A3 B1 , which shows how the melodic theme is repeated or varied by translation inversion contraction/expansion and rotation-mutation.

In post 103. (HOW TO CREATE MELODIES FROM A CHORD PROGRESSION 2/2: THE CHORD-LOCAL 7-NOTES SCALES OF A CHORD PROGRESSION AND THE MELODIC THEMES VARIATIONS THAT THEY DEFINE) we combined the chromatic 5-notes neighbourhood of the chromatic instance and he  melodic instance and we created the 7-notes local neighborhood scale of a chord and hopefully of the chord progression.



261. THE JAZZ HARMONIC PERSONALITY THE DIFFERENCE OF USING MINOR CHORDS (SADNESS THROUGH BLUE NOTES) IN EARLY WESTERN JAZZ COMPARED TO OTHER POP AND FOLK MUSIC AND EASTERN (GYPSY) JAZZ.

THE DIFFERENCE OF USING MINOR CHORDS (SADNESS THROUGH BLUE NOTES) IN EARLY WESTERN JAZZ COMPARED TO OTHER POP AND FOLK MUSIC AND EASTERN (GYPSY) JAZZ.


Incorporating minor chords in major chords is ofcourse the way that we feel sadness after or before we  feel happy.


POP OR OTHER FOLK MUSIC METHOD
In most of the usual pop and folk music in various cultures , the use of minor chords ,in a song e.g. which jas as part of major chords the main triad 5M-1M-4M of a diatonic scale (e.g. in C major G major-C major-F major) is to shift the triad of the lower relative minor chords in the same diatonic scale   3m-6m-2m  (e.g. shifting from the triad of  G major-C major-F major to the triad E minor A minor D minor).

EARLY WESTERN JAZZ METHOD
But in early jazz the incorporation of minor chords e.g. in a song which is utilizing the triad of majors 5M-1M-4M of a diatonic scale (e.g. in C major G major-C major-F major) is by shifting to the same root minor chords 5m-1m-4m (e.g.  G minor-C major-F minor). It is not necessary that the are used all 3 minor chords maybe only one or oly two of them. This essentially means that instead of the middle notes of the major chords:  B for G major E for C major and C for F major they are used the 
Bb, Eb , Ab (which by the way are all notes of the Eb major scale). Which is equivalent to the notes 

Bb, Eb G#. Notice that two of them  the Eb and G# are 2 of the first 4 Blue notes of the C major scale as described in post 245.

We repeat here the main definitions and concepts of Blue notes.

We remind the reader that in the online notes here we call a sequence of 7 interval that sum-up to 12 semitones a mode and all cyclic permutations of it as the scale that the mode belongs.

As it was mentioned in post 40 the order of how much harmonic is  an interval (and interval is more harmonic than another means that the two notes have a  greater number of common harmonics or overtones) the order of "harmonicity" is

8th>5th>4th> major 3rd>minor  3rd

The first 4 blue notes of the diatonic scale are  by definition the neighboring by one semitone notes to the interval of 5th c-g thus g# f# around g and c# around c and the same with the best next interval of major 3rd c-e thus d# or c# again . This gives the maximum shift from an harmonic interval to one with dissonance thus chromaticity. 

There cannot be other as first 4 notes other than the above 4 blue notes for the first 2 best intervals (5th and major 3rd) around the roor note .


The 1st blue note (5#) may make also the 4M chord 4m, so making the basic triad 5N 1M 4M, to 5M 1M 4m. Also the 2nd blue note 2# or 3b allows, for a 1 minor chord too. making therefore the triad 5N 1M 4M to  5M 1m 4M  or   5M 1m 4 m. This is met quite often in Early jazz as method to add sad  minor chords to the main happy triad of major chords.

EASTERN (GYPSY) JAZZ METHOD

In this type of jazz, there also used 2 of the 4 first Blue notes of the diatonic scale which are the 2# or 3b and 5#, in other words the same two blue notes of the early Western jazz. Nevertheless the way that they are used is by substituting the 2 with 2# and 5 with 5# , thus creating the double harmonic minor scale 6-7-1-2#-3-4-5#-6 . Therefore they are introduced as a new chromatization of the natural minor scale, which goes with further changes inthe chords of the original diatonic scale.

The 5# makes the 3m to 3M , 
the 2# makes the 7dim to 7M, 


IN SUMMARY BOTH EARLY WESTERN AND EASTERN (GYPSY) JAZZ MAY MAKE THE NEXT 7 TEMPORARY CHANGES IN THE CHORDS OF THE DIATONIC SCALE DUE TO THE 4 FIRST BLUE NOTES 

3m becomes 3M
7dim becomes 7M
5M becomes 5#dim
2m becomes 2M
6m becomes 6M
4M becomes 4m or 4dim
1M becomes 1#dim

Obviously not all of these changes occur necessarily simultaneously in a single song. maybe only few of them. And usually at least 50% of the time the chords are the normal of the diatonic scale. Other ways to organize them and perceive them are as triads of harmonic pairs of chords (see post 215  
IMPROVISATION OVER A PAIR OF CHORDS . TRIADS OF HARMONIC PAIRS OF CHORDS. ). This awareness of these alterations of the normal chords of a diatonic scale (by blue notes) allows for a consistent and rich system of harmony for composing and improvising early jazz type of jazz.

AS WE MAY NOTICE THIS SYSTEM OF HARMONY WITH THE FIRST 4 BLUE NOTES (AND  5TH BLUE NOT 6#=7b  MAY BE ADDED) IS ESSENTIALLY A METHOD TO PLAY SOONER OR LATER IN THE MELODY ALL THE 12 NOTES OF THE FULL CHROMATIC SCALE STARTING FROM THE 7 NOTES OF THE DIATONIC SCALE AND RETURNING TO THEM AGAIN.

CONVERSELY ANY MELODY WHICH STARTS AS MELODY OF A DIATONIC SCALE AND THEN EVOLVES WITH ANY TURN AND ANY MOVE INSIDE THE 12-NOTES FULL CHROMATIC SCALE CAN BE COVERED OR ACCOMPANIED WITH THE NEXT ALTERNATIONS OF THE CHORDS OF THE DIATONIC SCALE. IN WESTERN JAZZ IT IS CONCEIVED AS ALTERATIONS DUE TO THE BLUE NOTES WHILE IN EASTERN JAZZ AS ALTERATIONS DUE TEMPORARY CHANGE OF THE NATURAL MINOR TO ONE OF THE CHROMATIC MINORS (HARMONIC, DOUBLE HARMONIC , NEAPOLITAN , PARACHROMATIC MINORS ETC) THIS MAY BE CALLED CHROMATIC TONAL MUSICAS CONTRASTED TO MULTI-TONAL MUSIC OR ATONAL MUSIC.



Steps of the chromatic scale/Harmonic Personality
1
1#
2
2#
3
4
4#
5
5#
6
6#
7

JAZZ PERSONALITY
1M(ajor) or 1m
1#Dim or 6M
2m(inor) or 2M(ajor)7
7M
3or 3M(ajor)7
4or 4m or 4Dim
2M7
5M7 or 5m
5#Dim or 3M7
6or 6M7
5m
7Dim or 7Major7


Another wayto order the chords is as an arc in the wheel by 4ths

1) 7Dim or    7Major7
then
2) 3or 3M(ajor)7
then
3) 6or 6M7
then
4) 2m(inor) or 2M(ajor)7
then
5) 5M7 or 5m
then
6) 1M(ajor) or 1m
then
7) 4or 4m or 4Dim

Friday, August 9, 2019

260. WHY THE DIATONIC (CELTIC) HARP IS THE BEST INSTRUMENT TO COMBINE MELODIC IMPROVISATION WITH CHORDS IMPROVISATION IN A SINGLE (USUALLY DIATONIC )SCALE. TUNING THE HARP IN SET OF CHORDS AND NOT IN A SCALE.

WHY THE DIATONIC (CELTIC) HARP IS THE BEST INSTRUMENT TO COMBINE MELODIC IMPROVISATION WITH CHORDS IMPROVISATION IN A SINGLE (USUALLY DIATONIC) SCALE
Different instruments are best for different types of improvisation.


1) For example the few strings instruments with a fretboard like the guitar, the ukulele, the panduri, the charango etc are best for improvising chords that keep their shape in chromatic changes of the pitch, thus in a rather scale independent large range of scales.That is why they are used to accompany melodies in a large range of different scales. On the other hand solo-instruments like Bouzouki or mandolino as the fretboard is chromatic and it does not suggest a diatonic scale soloing on fretboards are the most convenient for a diatonic scale. E.g. "scale-shapes" must be learned on such chromatic fretboards. 


2)  Instruments like winds , flutes, clarinet, oboe, saxophone trumpet  etc are best for playing melodic solos and improvise melodies without chords.


3) String instruments like the violin and the mandolin  are best for soloing too as the tuning or the small size of the fingerboard is not very favorable for chords. But they are not the most convenient for improvising simultaneously melody and chords in  single diatonic scale.


4) The piano seemingly is an instrument that combines both chords and melodies improvisation. The disadvantage though is that it has a privileged  diatonic scale and mode the C major. You cannot change (easily each time you want to play a new song) the tuning of the white keys to another diatonic scale. Improvisation in other diatonic scales than C major, loses it intuitive convenience of using the white keys.


5) On the other hand the diatonic (not chromatic) Celtic harp either with pedals or only with levers is the best and most convenient instrument to improvise both melodically and with chord progressions in single diatonic scale. The main reason is that the sequence of strings is exactly the notes of the scale. If the celtic harp has only levers to tune diatonic scales all diatonic scales with sharps are directly tunable. The diatonic scales with flats are converted to sharps as follows. It requires tuning the strings one semitone lower and then all flats become naturals and all non-flats become sharps set by the levers. 

The advantages include: 

5.1) Very simple and same pattern of triad chords (1-3-5) for all types of chords major, minor, diminished , augmented.
5.2) Very simple intuitive grasping of intervals of 2nds 3rds 4ths 5ths etc. The names are as if created for the geometry of the harp
5.3) Very simple intuitive grasping of overlapping of melodies with accompanying triad chords and "vector-chords" (see post 183 CLOSURE OF A CHORD OR VECTOR-CHORD VERSUS ARPEGGIO OF A CHORD FOR IMPROVISING OVER A CHORD)

For not exactly the same but quite similar reasons, a pan flute tuned in a particular (diatonic usually ) scale allows by far easier Jazz improvisation that a single tube ordinary flute or whistle.



A METHOD T O CREATE THEORETICALLY BUT ALSO PRACTICALLY SIMPLICIAL COUNTER-MELODIES:

IMPROVISATION METHOD BASED ON  A SET OF CHORDS AND MELODIC LINES BRIDGING THE HIGHEST NOTES OF EACH OF THEM. APPLICATION WITH STRUMMING WITH CUATRO, CAVAQUINHO, UKULELE ETC



The application idea is that when the chord is realized with a voicing on the highest 4 (or all 4) strings , we create melodic lines on the highest string bridging the highest notes of two succesive chords. Because of a inherent phenomenon of the human sound perception , when we are strumming and chaning the chords with in-between such melodic lines, the musical perception clearaly heres a melody, which is that of the highest notes. If it was not the highest notes the melodic lines would be more often lost in listening in the strumming.
Such chord-bridging melodic lines use a last small part of the previous chord duration and a small initial part of the new chord duration. During the rset ofthe time there is strumming of the chord or a achord arpeggio or variations of small melodic themes inside the chord by intervals of 3rd or 4th/5th. Thus melodic-harmonic variaonions. While when bridging two succesive chords there may be melodic themes variations by intervals of 2nd 3rd or 4th/5th (thus chromatic-melodic-harmonic).
This technique utilizes the simplicity of the information of the set of chord and translates it it to a simple information about the type of variations of simple melodic themes with the time placement and duration of the chords.
With this technique we may create simplicial counter-melodies parallel to melody.
It applies verty easily when utilizing a chromatic harmonica (see post 274), ans harp, but also a violin (especially marked at a particular diatonic scale, so that we can identify chord-triad  shapes on it aftera convenient tuning) and finally also on a diatonic wind.


HOW TO PLAY THE HARP WHEN YOU ARE A GUITAR PLAYER

When you are a guitar player and also you play the harp (e.g.like Edmar Castaneda) , then you have finger nails only at the right hand , not at the left hand, and also the right hand is faster and more skilled in playing melodies compared to the left hand. It is not like a piano player who he may have trained both hands to play almost at the same complexity level. Then in such a situation , the harp player starts in playing with the right hand the melodic improvisation and with the lelft hand the simplicial submelody at lower octaves, which are so that there is one note per underlying chord , thus slow in changing, like the chords in a chord progression. In fact we just play at first one note almsot randomnly with the left hand when we feel that the chord changes or when we finish with the melodic theme with the right hand, and if the note that almost randomnly we play is not the right feeling we create a chromatic bass line up ot down till we end to a note that feels well and is in the underlying chord. Then as the skill is evolved instead of one only note per chord of the simplicial submelody we may start playing the whole chord or a bass-line over the chord.




TUNING THE HARP IN SET OF CHORDS AND NOT IN A SCALE.

This is a very efficient and flexible method in harp improvisation.Not only we can tune the harp say in 3 different scales in different octaves, but also we can tune the harp to play a set of chords that do not belong to a single scale! E.g. We can tune the harp to play the chords A7, Dm  , D, Gm, C , F . No single diatonic scale contains these chords. The easiest way to tune the Dm, and also the D is to be tuned on different octaves. Then we may apply the technique of chromatic closure of a  chord so as to improvise melodically on each chord.

By utilizing a sliding glass as in a havaia guitar, at the index or another finger,we may add fast sharps , even if we already have set sharp by the lever, and play flexibly on a preset tuning plus create nice glissanti. By sliding the finger-glass from top to the middle of any string played we create a nice glissanti of the note to its next octave note. 

In general the sliding glass may add the chromatic aspect on selected notes and strings in a nice way, which maybe missing in diatonic harp.  

The harmonics on strings are played easily in the harp by muting the middle of each string creating thus an harmonic of the same pitch with the open string but one octave higher.









In such an harp we may implement the intuitive way to improvise a melody fitting to a chords which can be implemented directly and visibly in such an harp , as described below (see also post 262) 

FOR THOSE HARPLAYERS THAT ARE ALSO GUITAR PLAYERS AND MUST HAVE THE LEFT HAND WITHOUT FINGER NAILS, I HIGHLY RECOMENT THE PRORTUGUESE  GUITAR ARTIFICIAL NAILS LIKE THESE HERE

https://www.folkreps.com/product-category/artificial-nails/



Or the similar Alaska artificial finger nails

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2hlhMQI8fg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oz-U1Zda1zI

Also one can make his own such convenient finger nails

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Hbujx2fR4Q

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMCW1DUJvhs&t=1s


Similar the Celtic harp is the Celtic or Gauloise Lyra

The word Lyra is an ancient Greek word for a similar musical instrument, which nowadays has been lost in modern Greece, but the word survived for another small bowed instrument like viola or violin played on the knees as a cello

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02pg9V1ENL8


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ga_cpL9pRsA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmExqfKa1Uc

The Lyra can be chromatic also not only diatonic as the harp as well

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCgjKaLKZLc


Similar to the harp is the bandura

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=or_Wp0tVHqU

It is quite strange how the harp makers have not added a a surface of wood at the upper part of the harp till the middle of the string that can serve as fretboard for each string , so that by taping the strings on the frets by the left hand (as in the guitar) and playing the string with the right hand (as in the guitar) add a chromatic dimension to the diatonic harp. 

Like some European zithers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pg36K4VM3vY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mxm2QK-ut_s

Or like e.g. the Chinese Guqin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tlsev6ZepqE

There are a number of important arp players that play jazz and improvise with the harp that include Dorothy Ashby and Gunhild Carling and Edmar Castaneda


Dorothy Ashby
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJjPBes9l50&t=97s

Gunhild Carling
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8L4PJFW2iY


Edmar Castaneda (Colombia)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wi2K7qU85wI


The traditional folk music of canun (Greek word canon canonaki meaning rule or little rule) has techniques for playing that apply equally well essentially to the harp with levers. With the left hand are played the more bass notes and with the right the higher as in piano and as in Colombian and Paraguayan harp. In canun or canonaki music are changed also the little "levers"all the time.


Turkey
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VS3LafxrMIs

Greece
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8z1hzcT_HLY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=APZBpStvKms

Similar instruments are the Finnish  Kantele

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kantele

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDGlMLUKaEA

Or the Russian Gusli

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bo8vDU3G12M

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oeqo80UqShk


Chinese harp Kongou

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqT7nfXTp5c

Greek sanduri

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAevTODirfI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QPLPtjmYTk

Chinese zither : The Guzheng

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujzMHLac404

AS IS THE CASE WITH ORGANIZATION STRUCTURES OF VARIOUS ORDERS OF DEPTH LIKE MUSIC AND ITS ORGANIZATION, THE IMPROVISATION CAN BE AT

 THE LOWEST LEVEL: 1) MELODIC ONLY 

AT A LOW LEVEL : 2) 2-VOICES OR PAIRS OF SIMULTANEOUS NOTES IMPROVISATION , 

AT A MIDDLE LEVEL: 3) CHORDS AND MELODY IMPROVISATION 

AND AT A HIGH LEVEL : 4) MORPHOLOGICAL REPETITIONS PATTERNS OF PARTS OF THE PIECE  IMPROVISATION



THE 5-NOTES CHORD-NEIGHBOURHOOD (5-chord) METHOD OF IMPROVISING OVER A TRIAD CHORD.  (see post 262) 



As we have mentioned before too, a criterion if a piece of melody is fitting to an underlying or accompanying chord is if at least 50% of the time of  the melody the notes of the chord are sounding. This is not the only criterion. Let us call it the 1st criterion. Actually this is a rather strict criterion. Another more loose criterion that we call here the 2nd criterion is that the intervals created by the notes oft he melody and the chord are more than 50% intervals of 3rds 4ths, 5thsor 8ths and larger rather than intervals of 2nds.


1) GENERAL METHOD Now if we utilize only 5 notes of the full chromatic 12-notes scale 3 of which are the notes of the triad chord X, then if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X. We call this the 5-notes methods of improvising over a triad chord.

2) THE CHROMATIC INSTANCE In particular, these 5 notes maybe the closure of the chord (see post 183 CLOSURE OF A CHORD OR VECTOR-CHORD VERSUS ARPEGGIO OF A CHORD FOR IMPROVISING OVER A CHORD) or vector-chord of the chord. This is a rather chromatic method of improvising over the chord it is best when the improvisation over a chromatic minor scale. As we mentioned if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X.

3) THE MELODIC INSTANCE Another method is the melodic method of  extending the chord X by a3rd lower of the root note and a 3rd higher of the highest note.  We make sure that the extended 3rds together with the inner 3rds of the chord are laternating major-minor 3rds E.g. if the triad chord is the major C-E-G, then we extend to the A-C-E-G-B, If the triad chord is the minor A-C-E we extend to the F-A-C-E-G. As we mentioned if we improvise a melody M which in the average stays about equal time to these 5 notes then according to the 1st criterion this melodic improvisation M fits the chord X.





SIMULTANEOUSLY OR CONSECUTIVELY IN TIME  MULTI-SCALE IMPROVISATION IN THE HARP 

When applying the improvisation method as in post 266, the change of the scale is done  gradually by altering some notes which in the harp means moving the levers to raise or lower by a semitone some notes of the scale.

If the harp has 3 or 4 or more octaves we may tune each or some of the octaves in different scales.

Because of the ordering of the strings it is impressive in the audio outcome to realize large intervals of notes with playing insequence and fast all intermediate notes of the scale in the interval , either up or down.

THE ANCIENT 1ST CIVILIZATIONAL GENERATION MELODIC TYPE OF  IMPROVISATION (see posts 265, 266) 

Here is about how improvisation was carried out in ancient times and is still carried out by the lovers of the 1st civilizational generation music (see post 265).


1) THE RHYTHMIC THEME  (A PERCUSSION INSTRUMENT) 

2) THE 5 OR 6 OR 7 NOTES SCALES

3) THE NOTES THAT THE MELODY STAYS MUCH LONGER (CENTERS THAT MAKE THE SIMPLICIAL SUB-MELODY)


IF THE CENTRAL  ENTITY IN HARMONY IS THE TRIAD CHORD THE CENTRAL ENTITY IN MELODY IS THE MELODIC THEME AND IN PARTICULAR THE OVERSIMPLIFIED VERSION OF SIMPLE MELODIC MOVE BY AN INTERVAL AS  TRACED IN SIMPLIFIED WAY BY THE SIMPLICIAL SUBMELODY

  The concept of centers of the melody (simplicial submelody) where the sound much longer than the other notes is essential.

In addition for every such chord or chord transition we may have a morphological rhythmic pattern E.g. A1 B1 B2 B3 or A1 A2 A3 B1 , which shows how the melodic theme is repeated or varied by translation inversion contraction/expansion and rotation-mutation.

Based on the above, the themes in the simplicial sub-melody as simple moves are of two polarities up (+) or down (-) and of three sizes Chromatic (symbol C) by intervals of 2nds, Melodic (symbol M) by intervals of 3rd and Harmonic (symbol H) by intervals of 4th, 5th, 8th or higher. Then the progression of the simplicial melodic themes in the song will have a symbolic form like E.g.

H(+)M(-)H(-)M(+)C(-)M(+)H(+).......etc

The translation/transposition  of a simplicial melodic theme retains its cahracter as chromatic , melodic or harmonic.
The inversion of a simplicial melodic theme inverses the + to - andthe - to +
The expansion/contraction of a simplicial melodic theme e.g. an expansion changes a chromatic to a melodic or harmonic and a melodic to an harmonic. A contraction changes an harmonic to a melodic or chromatic and a melodic to a chromatic.

4) ALTERING THE SCALE (by the levers) TO CREATE SCALES PROGRESSION (see e.g. posts 212, 213)

5) REPETITION PATTERNS IN THE  SCALES PROGRESSION

6) ISOCRATIC NOTES OR PAIRS OF STRINGS

7) NO UNDERLYING CHORDS AND NO  INSTRUMENT PLAYING ANY ACCOMPANYING CHORD.






THE GOLDEN LEVEL OF HARMONIC COMPLEXITY IN THE HARP : TWO STRINGS SIMULTANEOUSLY PLAYED IN INTERVAL OF 3RD.

For improvisations of the 1st generation of music as  in post 266, we may use pairs of strings an interval of  3rd away that in diatonic scales are always melodic intervals.We keep one bass pair with the left hand sounding alternating to the one of the right hand and always the same while with the right hand we move up and down not only steps  of 2nds but also of 3rds of such pairs. It is a simplistic harmony in between the single note melodies and the chord progressions. (see also post 257 and post 229) 


It seems that the golden level of complexity of harmony in the harp for scales more chromatic than the diatonic is the two simultaneous strings rather that the triad chord. In diatonic scale it is the triad chord.  The two simultaneous strings are by leaving a middle not played, creating thus most often in scales an interval of 3rd (major or minor).  We may play two such string with each hand , usually the one isocratic in other words constant repeating while the other chaning and create nice harmonic improvisation with string melodic character.

We may consider each double-voice pair of simultaneous notes as accompanying the lower note (happier accompanying) or as accompanying the higher note (less happy or a bit sad accompanying)

Pairs of simultaneous notes may be of interval of 2nds (chromatic) or of 3rd (melodic) or of 4th, 5th, 8th or higher (harmonic)

The expansion/contraction of a pair of simultaneous notes  e.g. an expansion changes a chromatic to a melodic or harmonic and a melodic to an harmonic. A contraction changes an harmonic to a melodic or chromatic and a melodic to a chromatic.


IMPROVISATION BASED ON CHORDS

Of course other methods of improvisation over diatonic scales that are based on chords are possible like

1) IMPROVISATION BASED ON THE MAIN TRIAD OF CHORDS 1-4-5 IN A DIATONIC MODE

2) CHROMATIC TONALITY BY INTRODUCING BLUE NOTED BY THE LEVERS OR THE GLISSANDO GLASS.

3) IMPROVISATION BASED ON A TRIAD OF HARMONIC PAIRS OF CHORDS (e.g. see post 215 )




For improvisation based on harmonic pairs of hords

See also post 203 and post 215

This is harmonic improvisation and parallel melodic improvisation much like the jazz Blues that are using 3 only chords I IV V, or improvisations as in Irish reels with 2 only chords or  improvisations as in Cretan condillies with 2 only chords. Also some folk songs of the Cape Verde with only 2 chords.

Here we have similarly the general rule of a scale of chords of 2 only chords . There 3 types of such pairs of chords HARMONIC PAIR (roots an interval of 5th or 4th away) , MELODIC PAIR (roots an interval of 3rd away) CHROMATIC PAIR (roots an interval of 2nd  away) . E.G. I it is X7 Y where the one is a 7nth chord and the second has a root which is an interval of 4th away from the root of the first chord it is an harmonic pair. .In other words the two chords are in the harmonic relation (see post  30 )   are successive in the wheel of 4ths.   The reason for this is so as to have in the subconscious a simple pattern in harmony (although with random variations from random sequences of these 2 chords)
Also another important reason is that the 2 chords define usually at least one diatonic or other scale which simplifies the melodic improvisation.

In a diatonic scale some choices for such a pair of chords could be

V7  I   (5M7  1M)   HARMONIC PAIR

I7 IV  (1M7  4M)   HARMONIC PAIR

vii  iii   (7dim  3m)  HARMONIC PAIR

iii7  vi  (3m7  6m)  HARMONIC PAIR

vi7  ii   (6m7 2m)  HARMONIC PAIR

ii7  V   (2m7 5M)  HARMONIC PAIR.

About the symbols: In a C major scale the symbols denote the next chords

I=1M=C
ii=2m=Dm
iii=3m=Em
IV=4M=F
V=5M=G
vi=6m=Am
vii=7d=Bdim


Such triads of harmonic pairs may be already in the 3 main relations Harmonic relation , Melodic relation and chromatic relation defined from the interval of the roots of the first chord of each pair.  

E.g. the triad of harmonic pairs vii  iii   (7dim  3m) ,  (3M7  6m), (6m7 2m) are in harmonic-harmonic-harmonic relations . While the triad of harmonic pairs

(6m7 2m) , (3M7  6m), (5M7  1M)  are in harmonic-melodic-chromatic relation.

All  6   combinations (the inverses not included) of such triads of harmonic pairs on the first pair are


HARMONIC-HARMONIC
HARMONIC-MELODIC
MELODIC-MELODIC
HARMONIC-CHROMATIC
CHROMATIC-CHROMATIC
CHROMATIC-MELODIC

ETC


By fixing particular pattern of permutations and repetitions of these 2 chords (as in variations of the rhythm and chord progressions in 12-bars blues) e.g.

X7 X7 X7 X7
Y Y X7 X7
X7 X7 Y Y

etc

we have the backtrack of an easy harmony to define with melodic improvisations.

The improvisation is spending most of the time between the elements of each harmonic pair by oscillating or alternating them and then after repetition is sufficient it moves to another harmonic pair staying again there sufficient ime. This is very common in early New Orleans Jazz songs.




Also the simplicial submelody of such improvisations will be fixed following the chord progression pattern.



Thursday, August 8, 2019

259. Extensions of the 6-notes Blues scale to four 7-notes scale that keep the 1-1-3 four-notes subscale

The Blues 6-notes scale is in semitones intervals the 1-1-3-2-3-2 or 2-1-1-3-2

or in steps of diatonic scale 7-1-1#-3-4#

If we want to tune a portable Celtic harp with levers for sharps it could be repeating a note e.g.

a#-b-c-d#-e#-f-g#-a# or in steps of a 7-notes diatonic scale 6#-7-1-2#-3#-4-5#-6#

If we want to keep the 1-1-3 invariant which is the ancient Greek chromatic tetrahord (4-notes subscale) known as parachromatic tonal  , then the possible extensions to 7 notes are the

1) 1-1-3-1-1-3-2 Which is nothing else than the Byzantine parachromatic scale
It  contains the 5-notes pentachord subscale   2-1-1-3 known as Samba

The Byzantine parachromatic scale is called also inverse Persian or  Purvi Theta scale.

E.g. as steps of a diatonic scale 6-7-1-1#-3-4-4#-6. or in c major a-b-c-c#-e-f-f#-a

If we want to tune a portable Celtic harp with levers for sharps it could be e.g.

c-d#-e-f-g#-a#-b-c

2) 1-1-3-2-2-1-2 , which contains the 5-notes pentachord subscale   2-1-1-3 known as Samba. It is  made from the samba pentachord and the diatonic tetrachord 2-2-1.

E.g. as steps of a diatonic scale 6-7-1#-2-3-4-4#-6 or in notes of c major a-b-c#-d-e-f-f#-a

3) 1-1-3-2-1-2-2 . Again it contains the the 5-notes pentachord subscale   2-1-1-3 known as Samba

E.g. as steps of a diatonic scale 6-7-1-2-3-4-4#-6 or in notes of c major a-b-c-d-e-f-f#-a

4) 1-1-3-2-3-1-1 , or  as steps of a diatonic scale 7-1-1#-3-4#-6-6#-7 or in notes of c major b-c-c#-e-f-f#-a-a#-b It is as symmetric as the Byzantine (double) parachromatic scale. Actually it is made from the samba pentachord 1-1-3-2  (or  by cyclic permutation 2-1-1-3 ) and its inverse  2-3-1-1.


258 WHY PROFOUND IMPROVISATION IS A TRIPLE BALANCE MEDITATION IN 2/3DS INDEPENDENT FROM THE MUSICAL INSTRUMENT

WHY PROFOUND IMPROVISATION IS A TRIPLE BALANCE INTERNAL ACTIVE MEDITATION IN 2/3DS INDEPENDENT FROM THE MUSICAL INSTRUMENT!

Improvisation produces beautiful music and gives deep satisfaction as it requires deep internalisation of the musical composition process.

There mainly 3 centers that are involved in the process of musical improvisation

1) The skill and conveniences of the fingers and geometry, tuning etc of the musical instrument

2) The internalized memories of musical listening that have become feeling-habits

3) Our mental images of musical-theory conceptual tools (like chords, intervals , scales , rhythms etc)

Now if one of these control or abilities centers over-dominates the other two some rather undesired effects occur in the improvised music

1) If the skill and convenience of the fingers in the instrument drives are mainly when improvising music , then a rather narrow type of music may be produced depending on what our knowledge of the  instrument allows. In addition each time we try to improvise, our fixed skills on the instrument tend to repeat so much that the resulting music is repetitively boring. This is what happens to skilled instruments players that do not have sufficient or do not create new musical theoretic concepts

2) When out listening memories and listening habits mainly dominate much our improvisation, then we tend to repeat known small pieces of melodies or harmonies and the richness of the new musical sound is not occuring.

3) When our mental musical theoretical and conceptual tools dominates when improvising, we may fall in the trap of creating very interesting new concepts of music which nevertheless are not well sounding and do not trigger familiar feelings of our musical habits therefore are not grasped at least initially as beautiful music.

It is only when our improvisation is a triple balance of a triple improvisation that the resulting music is beautiful and satisfying musical creation. And the triple improvisation is a triple improvisation in FINGER-ACTIONS, FEELINGS AND INTELLECTUAL THINKING.

The triple improvisation is

1) An improvisation of new shapes and patterns on the skill of the fingers that play the instrument

2) An improvisation in our nervous system, on new synthesis of musical memories and stored musical feelings which is new but also familiar. And this is a process not on the instrument but on our internalized musical memories and feelings.

3) An improvisation of new combinations of musical-theoretic concepts that give a simple center to organize our improvisation. And this is a process not on the instrument neither on our musical habits of feelings but on our intellect and mental images of theoretical concepts.

For those that play many instruments with strings or winds, the parts 2) and  3) are indispensable tools for simplification and learning as the do not depend on the instrument!


As the inner two parts of this meditation may have their own timing and flow, the improvisation must follow and combine these separate timings: 1) Of the fingers abilities, 2) of the speed of shaping of the emotions 3) of the speed of the flow of intellectual musical conceptual tools.Therefore fastness might be impressive finger-skill but may not correspond to a deep satisfying musical creation. 

As 2/3 of the improvisation is internal rather than external on the musical instrument, we may say that an improvisation is a type of TRIPLE ACTIVE MEDITATION.

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

257. MAINLY (1/2 OF THE TIME) MELODIC (ALTERNATING MAJOR-MINOR 3RDS) IMPROVISATION "WALKING" WITH CHROMATIC DECORATIONS (OSCILLATIONS BY 2NDS) IN DIATONIC SCALES

MAINLY (1/2 OF THE TIME) MELODIC (ALTERNATING MAJOR-MINOR 3RDS) IMPROVISATION "WALKING" WITH CHROMATIC DECORATIONS (OSCILLATIONS BY 2NDS) IN DIATONIC SCALES


There is a type of improvisation where the  main and most often (at least 1/2 of the time) size of steps in the Improvisational "walking" is the intervals of 3rds in other words "meloding walking" , and in particular alternating major and minor 3rds. Then about 1/3 of the time we move with chromatic steps of intervals of 2nds, and particular when going up or down we oscillate around a note with an interval of 2nd (chromatic embellishments) and less often (less than 1/3 of the time) with harmonic intervals in other words  intervals of 4ths, 5ths or larger than 8ths.

This type of improvisation works well in diatonic scales where there is maximum number of triad chords made from alternating intervals of major-minor 3rds. On the other had in chromatic minor scale (harmonic minor, double harmonic minor, melodic minor , parachromatic etc) the "walking" with intervals of 2nds is more convenient as there not many triad major or minor chords .

Such type of improvisation is quite often in folk Irish music or early New Orleans jazz. This is the cae also with Andes improvisational folk music with Zampona pan-flutes.

Such improvisation are to be contrasted with the usual "improvisational walking" e.g. of Stephane Grappelli which is mainly with steps by intervals of 2nds.

Similarly improvisational counter-melodies in Greek folk Bouzouki music which are mainly with steps by intervals of 2nds.

The keys to a nice flow of improvisation as expressed in many cultures folk music are 

Simplicity in the harmony (triads of harmonic pairs of chords) 
Simplicity in melodic themes 
Simplicity in rhythmic variations of the melodic themes and repetitions

Saturday, July 27, 2019

256. THE TRIAD OF CHOICES WHEN IMPROVISING A MELODY




The simplicity of triad of factors for the melodic action is  mainly the next three factors

1) The triad of polarity (qualitative) of a melodic move (ascending, descending, rotating stationarily or isocratic), The relevant theme variation here is inversion

2) The  quantitative  triad of the character of the move :Chromatic (2nds) , Melodic (3rds) ,Harmonic (4th, 5ths or more than 8ths). The relevant theme variation here is expansion-contraction

3) The rhythmic pattern of repetitions or translations . The relevant theme variation here is translation.

The keys to a nice flow of improvisation as expressed in many cultures folk music are 

Simplicity in the harmony (triads of harmonic pairs of chords or triads of chords or only a pair of chords or a single power-chord)
Simplicity in melodic themes 
Simplicity in rhythmic and pitch variations of the melodic themes and repetitions


IF THE CENTRAL  ENTITY IN HARMONY IS THE TRIAD CHORD THE CENTRAL ENTITY IN MELODY IS THE MELODIC THEME AND IN PARTICULAR THE OVERSIMPLIFIED VERSION OF SIMPLE MELODIC MOVE BY AN INTERVAL AS  TRACED IN SIMPLIFIED WAY BY THE SIMPLICIAL SUBMELODY.

Based on the above, the themes in the simplicial sub-melody as simple moves are of two polarities up (+) or down (-) and of three sizes Chromatic (symbol C) by intervals of 2nds, Melodic (symbol M) by intervals of 3rd and Harmonic (symbol H) by intervals of 4th, 5th, 8th or higher. Then the progression of the simplicial melodic themes in the song will have a symbolic form like E.g.

H(+)M(-)H(-)M(+)C(-)M(+)H(+).......etc

The translation/transposition  of a simplicial melodic theme retains its cahracter as chromatic , melodic or harmonic.
The inversion of a simplicial melodic theme inverses the + to - andthe - to +
The expansion/contraction of a simplicial melodic theme e.g. an expansion changes a chromatic to a melodic or harmonic and a melodic to an harmonic. A contraction changes an harmonic to a melodic or chromatic and a melodic to a chromatic.


MAINLY MELODIC IMPROVISATION WITH CHROMATIC DECORATIONS
There is a type of improvisation where the  main and most often (at least 1/2 of the time) size of steps in the Improvisational "walking" is the intervals of 3rds in other words "meloding walking" , and in particular alternating major and minor 3rds. Then about 1/3 of the time we move with chromatic steps of intervals of 2nds, and particular when going up or down we oscillate around a note with an interval of 2nd (chromatic embellishments) and less often (less than 1/3 of the time) with harmonic intervals in other words  intervals of 4ths, 5ths or larger than 8ths.

Such type of improvisation is quite often in folk Irish music or early New Orleans jazz. This is the cae also with Andes improvisational folk music with Zampona pan-flutes.

This type of improvisation works well in diatonic scales where there is maximum number of triad chords made from alternating intervals of major-minor 3rds. On the other had in chromatic minor scale (harmonic minor, double harmonic minor, melodic minor , parachromatic etc) the "walking" with intervals of 2nds is more convenient as there not many triad major or minor chords .


Such improvisation are to be contrasted with the usual "improvisational walking" e.g. of Stephane Grappelli which is mainly with steps by intervals of 2nds.

Similarly improvisational counter-melodies in Greek folk Bouzouki music which are mainly with steps by intervals of 2nds.


When making a melodic improvisation the triad of choices are the next 3 (similar to the triad of choices in chord-progression improvisation  of making  a chord transition which is chromatic melodic or harmonic. The mutation or rotation may be considered  a 4th decision but it essential a restart of the previous process.


1) TRANSLATE UP OR DOWN THE MELODIC THEME, CHROMATICALLY, MELODICALLY OR HARMONICALLY 

2) INVERT THE MELODIC THEME CHROMATICALLY, MELODICALLY OR HARMONICALLY

3) EXPAND-CONTRACT THE MELODIC THEME WITHIN THE SCALE.

4) ROTATE IMPROVISATIONALLY IN PLACE OR CREATE A NEW MELODIC THEME (MUTATION) IN PLACE , OR UP OR DOWN BY AN HARMONIC INTERVAL (4TH OR 5TH) OR INTERVAL LARGER THAN AN OCTAVE.