3

Look, at the following two chord progressions:

(1) Dm C Bb Am Gm F Em Am

(2) Dm C Bb Am Gm F E A

Now, for the first six measures in both (1) and (2), we're just playing chords contained inside the Dm scale (D E F G A Bb C). However, I find (2), where I at the end deviate from the Dm scale, more pleasant than (1), where I just keep to the Dm scale all way through. In (2), I find that what sounds best is to use some kind of arabic sounding scale (E F G# A B C D) and (A Bb C# D E F G) for the last two chords when improvising over them.

Is there any theory that can back up my inuition? What is happening here? Why am I switching modes instead of just sticking to the Dm scale?

5 Answers 5

4

In (2) the E and A chords constitutes dominants for respective following chord. Especially with the scales you mention which entails the minor sevenths. The E7 is a secondary dominant and the A7 is the dominant of Dm.
Dominants are associated with a strong urge to resolve to their next chord in the circle of fifths. This particular sequence, E7 A7 Dm (or V7/V-V7-i) is a very common cadence that your ears likely favor before the much less resolve prone sequence of Em7 Am7 Dm.

(I'm here assuming you repeat the chord sequence or at least go on to a following Dm.)

EDIT:
The scales you list (mixolydian b2 b6) I believe is the natural consequence of making the E and A chords dominant - with a major third (and a non-flatted fifth, and a minor seventh) - while otherwise sticking to the Dm tonality.

2

Note that in your progression (1) the Em chord is not actually in the Dm scale. The equivalent Dm chord here would actually be a diminished triad Eo = E-G-B♭.

In D minor key, the classic ii-V-i cadence would be Eø-A7-Dm, where Eø is a half-diminished chord.

When you use A7 vs Am as the V chord, this is now a D harmonic minor scale. I tend to think of the harmonic minor scale as "normal (melodic) minor, except when on the V chord".

1
  • From my understanding of D minor, both Bb and B are in it. I'd call both Em and E° as being in the Dm scale. Now D natural minor/D Aeolian only accepts E°...
    – Dekkadeci
    Aug 24, 2017 at 19:25
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The non-diatonic major 3rds of the last two chords are both "leading tones" that resolve to the roots (tonics) of the immediately following chords, i.e. G#(Maj 3rd) => A(Tonic), and C#(Maj 3rd) => D(Tonic), if you added the min 7th (dominant 7th) to each chord (D added to E = E7 and G added to A = A7) it would create a tri-tone (very unstable/restless/dissonant/tense) together with the 3rd of the respective chord (G# and D = tri-tone / C# and G = tri-tone). This resulting tension creates a sense of movement... or maybe unsettledness or "dissonance" that tends to want to "resolve" in a certain way. With the G# & D in a E7 the G# => A and the D => E; in the same way the C# and G want to go to D and A (respectively) because of the tension introduced by the tri-tone.

Incidentally... the last 3 chords are properly represented by V/V => V => i... (or V7/V => V7 => i if you want to add the dominant 7ths).

My own opinion here is that you can literally play anything you want to over the dominant 7th chords as long as you resolve it to the following chord... i.e. for E7: G# dim arpeggio, E "super-locrian/altered scale" (7th "mode" of melodic minor), octatonic scales (whole-half, half-whole) based off the previous leading tone (diminished arp. again), whole-tone, chromatic, different pentatonic scales, chromatic/diatonic passing tones, appoggiaturas, etc... (personally I tend to be adventurous here and have a completely "anything goes" attitude… even something completely random as long as you bring it back home at the right time, in the case of E7 to A come back to A maj and then go "out" again until you need to resolve when you hit dmin)... look for chromatic resolutions back to the diatonic sound or most strongly to a chord tone of the following chord (most of this can pretty much be explained by the concept of tri-tone substitution... an inverted tri-tone is still a tri-tone and implies another possible root or tri-tone above/below the root of the V which ends up being a half-step above the "tonic" or root of the target chord).

Basically your desire to add the G# and C# over the E and A is simply a desire to play the right quality of 3rd (maj vs. min) on top of the maj E and A chords (you are simply matching the scale/mode to the chord or "playing the changes", a very common and accepted technique for improvisation over chord changes). Note that you'll want to return to G and C natural over the dmin at the end... remember G# resolves to A (G natural is reintroduced as the 7th of A7) and C# wants to go to D (and C natural comes back as the 7th of D). If you don't change these notes in the way you've described you'll hear the clash of a minor 2nd over each... G# against G and C# against C... although, like I said, you can get away with it if you do it the right way (left unchanged they would be a #9th altered dominant sound and turn into dominant 7ths of the following chord... but if you don't play the tri-tone and then resolve it as well they're more likely to sound odd... so if you want to play the G and C as a #9 tonality you still need to add the G# and D as well as the C# and G respectively to E and A).

I should probably add that my answers here in relation to tri-tone sub. theory would be identified as more "Jazz" than "Classical", although personally I don't like drawing a distinction.

0

You establish Dm during your song, in both lines. The second last chord is expected to be Eº or Eø diatonically, but instead you use

  • Em for the first line (so Bb in the scales becames altered Bb->B)
  • E for the second line (so Bb and G became Bb->B and G->G#)

For the first line you are stepping within minority from an A natural minor scale to an A melodic minor scale (V grade, Mixolydian b6), but I think it's safer to simply say we are modulating from natural minor to dorian. If it's a temporal "chromatic" modulation or not, we can only tell by hearing the overlapped melody notes (since we don't know in which mode does the ambiguous Em plays).

For the second line you are stepping within minority from an A natural minor scale to an A harmonic minor scale (IV grade, Dorian#4, the "Romanian" scale), which is normally more "hearable" as it keeps the (b3,)b6 alteration structure for which the minor scales have sense when harmonizing in thirds. You can assume the Harmonic minor function as you end with an A (probably it's not casual, you felt it was called), which specially if its A7, claims for the Dm again (V7-I is the typical cadence for Hm).

This is same use as in Tico-Tico Na fubá (typical accordion song): Dm-A7-Dm. Gm-Dm, E7-A7-Dm (in D as yours) [it certainly has these romanian fanfar feel]

Tico-Tico Na Fubá

Am-E7-Am, Dm-Am, B7-E7-Am

You are moving in fifths taking profit of this V7-I power V7-of-V7-of-I, V7-of-I, I, it's like a modal interchange in between the harmonic scale. Blues uses oftenly this principle as well.

E G# B D = E7 = V7 of Am
| V V |
E A C (D) = Am(add11) = I of Am

Leading note is clear, semitone moving creates a perfect fit strength, as G# moves to A whilst B does the same to C, and meanwhile the other notes are fixed.

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The question is more 'should I stick in one mode/key' throughout a piece of music'? And the answer is 'Of course not! Whatever gave you that idea?'

Show me any song, with any chord progression, I'll find a way of fitting it into 'theory', whether it's all in one mode, moves to another one, 'borrows', 'planes', 'pivots' or just plain jumps into unknown territory for a dramatic contrast. I can help you to label a pleasing sequence, so you can use it again. But this doesn't give you permission to use any particular sequence. Your ear and brain does that.

'Theory describes, it does not command'. I'm going to keep saying that until it sinks in :-)

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