My 11-year old son is practicing iim, V7, IM's and IM, VI7, iim, V7's on the piano.
Evidently, on steel guitar, modulating these Sequences is as easy as moving the bar.
He started out on CMaj key centers and asked what are the most common Key Centers these Sequences are found on, to start practicing. On the piano evidently, modulating these around is not as easy as for "us".
I must say, I see 2,5,1's "everywhere... but for the sake of delaying the answer that is on the horizon ("ALL 12 keys, son!")... I came up with the diatonic minors:
- CM (diatonic iim Dm)
- DM (diatonic iim Em)
- GM (diatonic iim Am)
so far no # or b chords
any suggestions which key centers for these sequences are the most common in Jazz Standards?
WHY?: in Jazz some will temporarily modulate keyCENTERS within a progression, for certain short parts (aka. "Sequences") so to make them fit to common diatonic numbers moves.
E. g.: a progression may show a succession of iiim, VI7, IIM which can be viewed as a iim, V7, IM ("2m, 5dom, 1") modulated a whole step up from the progressions natural iim-chord position. This simplifies "learning" and knowing where to play certain phrases ('licks" or "lines") modulated all over the place.
Thanks!... J-D.
most common key centers for 2,5,1 and 1,6,2,5
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- J D Sauser
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most common key centers for 2,5,1 and 1,6,2,5
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A Little Mental Health Warning:
Tablature KILLS SKILLS.
The uses of Tablature is addictive and has been linked to reduced musical fertility.
Those who produce Tablature did never use it.
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A Little Mental Health Warning:
Tablature KILLS SKILLS.
The uses of Tablature is addictive and has been linked to reduced musical fertility.
Those who produce Tablature did never use it.
I say it humorously, but I mean it.
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- J D Sauser
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I agree that he will have to work up his chops in all keys... especially when thinking in such modulated terms.
I got him to play a Bebop Line over IM, VI7, iim, V7... and started over C-Major Center.. he learned over D and G in 30 mins...
I programmed an iRealPRO track D, G, C... modulating up in fourths... and he got it like "that"... It's "easy" on steel... but you got to be envious for kids.
I wished I had gotten the support for my inclination to Jazz when I was his age.
Thanks!... J-D.
I got him to play a Bebop Line over IM, VI7, iim, V7... and started over C-Major Center.. he learned over D and G in 30 mins...
I programmed an iRealPRO track D, G, C... modulating up in fourths... and he got it like "that"... It's "easy" on steel... but you got to be envious for kids.
I wished I had gotten the support for my inclination to Jazz when I was his age.
Thanks!... J-D.
__________________________________________________________
A Little Mental Health Warning:
Tablature KILLS SKILLS.
The uses of Tablature is addictive and has been linked to reduced musical fertility.
Those who produce Tablature did never use it.
I say it humorously, but I mean it.
A Little Mental Health Warning:
Tablature KILLS SKILLS.
The uses of Tablature is addictive and has been linked to reduced musical fertility.
Those who produce Tablature did never use it.
I say it humorously, but I mean it.
- Matthew Walton
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I guess for a concrete example, All The Things You Are has major ii-V-I progressions in Ab, C, Eb, G, and E. With a quick minor ii-V-i in Fm to get back to the top.
If something I wrote can be interpreted two ways, and one of the ways makes you sad or angry, I meant the other one.
1981 MSA "The Universal" 9/5 | 2009 MSA S-12 SuperSlide | Peavey Nashville 112
1981 MSA "The Universal" 9/5 | 2009 MSA S-12 SuperSlide | Peavey Nashville 112
- Bob Watson
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I would have him learn them in all 12 keys by figuring out some sort of exercise using a cycle of 5ths, or possibly a cycle of 4ths. IMHO, he might as well just jump in. I found this when I googled it and there are also quite a few You Tube videos that discuss learning 2 5 1's using the cycle of 5ths and/or cycle of 4ths. I hope this helps. https://www.freejazzlessons.com/jazz-th ... eat-sheet/
- Fred Treece
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The perfect song to use for responding to the question in the OP, which struck me as a little odd.Matthew Walton wrote:I guess for a concrete example, All The Things You Are has major ii-V-I progressions in Ab, C, Eb, G, and E. With a quick minor ii-V-i in Fm to get back to the top.
2-5-1 progressions and licks know no stylistic or tonal center bounds. They should be learned for the different home positions (no pedals, AB down, E’s lowered) as well as for different keys, rhythms, and tempos. It is an endless process, but young people need encouragement, not intimidation and tedium. On the other hand, you can’t tell them truthfully that “these are the most important keys” because you know that’s BS. But studying and playing in 2 or 3 keys in maybe a half cycle of fifths over a two-week immersion is an achievable goal and makes learning the other keys seem more possible.
- Andrew Frost
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but for the sake of delaying the answer that is on the horizon ("ALL 12 keys, son!")...
Something I've been thinking about for ages, is getting into a yearly routine where each month has a special, prioritized focus on a different key...
You could do it systematically or randomly, it wouldn't really matter.
Lets say February is Eb month...You really prioritize the 'theme' of Eb, so you're largely thinking in Eb all month, and getting inside the key, sight-reading, learning tunes, improvising, transposing tunes into that key, whatever. Perhaps making Eb playlists so you're just right in the nuances of that tonal centre all month. Then March comes, new key, and so on. I have yet to do this, but I think it could be a cool thing. If a key has two names, you would bring them both into the fold for that month, and I guess the relative minors would be factored in if you like, or perhaps a second annual cycle could be strictly minor keys.