Ah, yes, Free Boid. Watch the movie "Elizabethtown" sometime. It's Free Boid at it's best…To be honest, I'd even rather play Free Boid.

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White Room has a totally different chord progression.Joachim Kettner wrote:Did they steal it from "White Room" by Cream?
Is there a B-bender? I don't remember hearing that. And I've been under the impression there was a keyboard (including piano) player in the band. But I'm very far from being a Skynyrd fan. If I don't have to play "Sweet Home Alabama" or "Gimme Three Steps" ever again, it will be far too soon.Joachim Kettner wrote:Yes Bill, if you see it this way. I also notice the use of a B-Bender and the piano, (is it Al Kooper, Jon Light?) lightening the mood.
But the message as an answer song to "Southern Man" is dubious. I remember an album by Don Nix and the Alabama State Troupers, it was more of my taste.
Les Cargill wrote:There is no C major chord in the key of D.
In your example, the bVII chord is a "borrowed chord" from another key. It's the IV of IV. That song is in a common major key (a.k.a. ionian mode). That's not what's happening in Sweet Home Alabama. It uses the bVII note and chord from the mixolydian mode. If you play a C# note anywhere in Sweet Home Alabama, it will sound out of key.Steve Green wrote:In the key of D, isn't a b7 a C major?Les Cargill wrote:There is no C major chord in the key of D.
I'm talking about a bVII (b7) as used in this example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rxEnGyoqSE
I rest my case.b0b wrote:If you play a C# note anywhere in Sweet Home Alabama, it will sound out of key.
I hear it differently. Now, I can't find my way home.But it's pretty obvious the progression is at rest or "at home" on the D major, where landing on the G leaves it feeling unresolved.
The problem with that is when you get to the supposed tonic (G), the scale is also Mixolydian. You're not playing a G major scale over G there.Charlie McDonald wrote:G.I rest my case.b0b wrote:If you play a C# note anywhere in Sweet Home Alabama, it will sound out of key.
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However, having re-read MvA's argument:I hear it differently. Now, I can't find my way home.But it's pretty obvious the progression is at rest or "at home" on the D major, where landing on the G leaves it feeling unresolved.
Gee....