Awesome teaching method, been playing 21 years and you unlocked secrets that have made me a better songwriter in just a few hours of study of your videos Mike George. Astounding !!! Thank You !
For Dorian I look at the 5 th note and play that minor scale. So for D dorian I play the A minor scale. For E dorian I play the B minor scale. For A dorain I play the E minor scale. And so on. For Mixolydian I look at the 4th note and play that major scale. So for D mixolydian I play the G major scale. For E Mixolydian I Play the A major scale. For A mixolydian I play the D major scale. Rember to emphasize the dorian #6 and mixolydian b7
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Yes, but play that over a c major chord/track and it won’t be Dorian. I know you know this, but it drives me bonkers. The notes don’t give you the tonal quality, the chords do. The notes are also c major, e Phrygian etc
Modes love certain arpeggios, if you can isolate 2,3 arpeggios that gives the sound of the mode you will be much better than playing it up and down like this video shows. for example the Dorian mode would want the 1 Minor 7th and the 6th Half Diminished chord,also for some outside sound throw in a deminished arpeggio that begins on Either the 1,b3,b5 and 6.
If you do 3 notes per string descending, you get 7 positions (making up the basic major scale fretboard pattern) that then repeat. Each one of the 7 positions is linked to each one of the 7 modes. The first position is Ionian Second position Dorian 3rd pos Phrygian 4th Lydian 5th ML 6th Aeolian 7th Locrian So basically, if you know the whole major fretboard pattern, all 7 positions, if someone says "D Dorian!" you know toplay the "2nd position" on D (on the low E string, 3notes/string, descending) and obviously the rest of the fretboard is where it is relative to where you know the second position is (if Phrygyian than 3rd pos, Lydian 4th, etc.) Don't know why noone explains it like this.
@@robinbjerregaard4077 exactly. Guitar is a pattern instrument. Learn one set of patterns and you have them in all keys and modes. These YT guys love to over complicate things.
@@celticpride9311 *IF* there are no accompanying chords you can manipulate it like that. *IF* there are accompanying chords, then playing a D note over c major is NOT Dorian. If you're playing in C major, and you end on a C chord AND end on a D note, you wouldn't be in "Dorian"..you would just have an unresolved/dissonant note. In fact, Dorian is minor which implies you're emphasizing the flat 3rd. If you played a C chord and a D note, there is no flat third and it would not have any minor qualities.