Talk:Chord progression
IS PROGRESSION A TECHNIQUE?=
Mein freind und I enter a discusion he say technique is not progression i say the contrary wich is right???
--->ALSO
A certain chord can be present in several different scales
example
C E G bB appears in the scales of CDEFGA Bb ( C mixolydian ) FGA Bb CDE ( F major ) GA Bb CDE F# ( G minor ) C Eb E F F# G Bb ( C blue scale ) etc ....
Therefore A chord is common to several tonalities
- What you listed are scales. They consist of tones, not chords! And of course a certain tone can be present in several different scales, after all there are only 12 tones.
---> Especially modern jazz artists use these "characteristics " of chords by using chords progressions to create a constantly ongoing modulation ....
Theorists/ teachers (of this particular mode of playing ) include
Nathan Davis Hal Singer
> Performers of these styles even fabricated so called " synthetic " scales
on several ( simple three chord ) progressions ( and a different one on "bridges" in anatole -pieces / ballad and tin -pan -alley material )
Sonny Rollins is an outstanding " player " of these linear approaches to motivistic and rapid scale- changing modes of improvisation
see short discussion at Talk:Harmonic progression
--- In the table, there under major IV, one of the progressions starts with a VI, I think this is a mistake, all the others start with the same as the title of the row but I don't feel as if I know enough to change it!
Under "Rewrite Rules," the link to "well-formed" doesn't go anywhere useful. I'm not sure what exactly it should link to. Maybe something should be added to the disambiguation page? Foxmulder 18:10, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
Same goes for "cyclic." Also changed the VI to a IV; I assume that was a typo. Foxmulder 18:40, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
The rewrite rules are quite unclear in the examples.