Hey everyone hopefully some one who knows the answer to this will read this. As a Jazz student I am an admitted music theory dork and I had a question that hopefully will generate some good discussion. In re-reading Michaels lesson on Gypsy theory (the first one) and Michael mentions the bebop scale which I have always wondered about. In the Lesson Michael explains it as a Major scale with a passing tone between the 5th and 6th scale degrees. That consequently is also how it is described in Mark Levines Jazz theory book, but the other day in my guitar lesson at school My guitar professor was working with me on improvising over "On Green Dolphin Street" and the subject of Bebop scales came up and he explained it as a Major scale with a b7-7-8(1). He said it gave the major scale a dominant sound and is good to play over a dominant chord. Michael(or any of you other theory minded cats) can you help me? which is which?
Hard work beats talent, when talent doesn't work hard.
Comments
from a purely academic (or at the very least the one used at berklee) standpoint, michael's answer is the correct one... bebop scale is generally the major scale with #5/b6
the one your teacher referred to is the Mixolydian scale with passing tone.... and that is why it obviously works well with dominant harmonies...
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
Yes...the mixolydian bebop. I talk about that one in my Gypsy Theory lesson as well. "bebop scale" is a misnomer because musicians were doing this back to Louis Armstrong. Django defintily was aware of this principle.
'm
but if you just mean the passing tone concept, it's just adding chromaticism between notes of the scale... that very last paulus schafer lick in daphne makes use of that concept... (A A#
i'll post other examples eventually
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
Are, in effect, both of these correct, as we're only talking about a passing tone here?
These are all just names we give to sounds.
As Stan Getz said "I'm into moods not modes"
Stu