Cycle of Doom - one view
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Cycle of Doom - one view
One view of the cycle and flat and sharp lying lydian keys.
The home base of this example is F lydian (seen in the middle of the list). Above F lydian are all the sharp lying lydian scales and below F lydian are all the flat lying scales. I started each scale on F or F# for comparison's sake. This forum doesn't seem to allow me any better formatting - I'll do my best.
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### SHARP LYING SCALES ( DO NOT CONTAIN F ) ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ]
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ]
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ]
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ]
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ] ### FLAT LYING SCALES ( CONTAIN F ) ###
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
The home base of this example is F lydian (seen in the middle of the list). Above F lydian are all the sharp lying lydian scales and below F lydian are all the flat lying scales. I started each scale on F or F# for comparison's sake. This forum doesn't seem to allow me any better formatting - I'll do my best.
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### SHARP LYING SCALES ( DO NOT CONTAIN F ) ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ]
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ]
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ]
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ]
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ] ### FLAT LYING SCALES ( CONTAIN F ) ###
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
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Now think about these lydian scales in relation to the F Maj I chord and D- VI chord of F lyd.
None of the sharp keys support the F Maj/D- chords on the I or VI.
Only two of the flat keys support the F Maj/D- chords.
These two flat lying keys are special because they are able to form the F maj/D- chords and therefore function as the horizontal member scales of F lydian (F Maj and F Maj b7).
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### NO F Maj/D- chords ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ]
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ]
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ]
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ]
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO I chord (F maj - now Ih) and VI chord (D- now VIh) being still intact : F Major = HTG ###
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO I chord ( F maj Ih) and VI chord (D- VIh) being still intact : F Maj b7 = HTG ###
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ] ### NO F Maj/D- chords ###
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
So there is no question that playing a Bb or Eb lydian scale over F Maj/D- chords leads to HTG.
But now to carry this further into the realm of speculation: It seems to me that any of the flat lying scales to F LYD, (even though Ab, Db, Gb, and Cb cannot form the F Maj/D- chords), when played over an F maj/D- chord, can resolve to the F maj/D- chords.
For instance, Ab Lydian 9 tone is a lot like the F blues scale, and can be played over F and resolves to F giving us Horizontal Tonal Gravity.
So I wonder if any time you play a flat lying lydian scale over a sharp lying chord you will get horizontal tonal gravity, or a scale that resolves to its underlying chord instead of being a unity with its underlying chord.
George says on p.214 that placing the lower above the higher leads to duality. And isn't duality part of his definition of HTG?
None of the sharp keys support the F Maj/D- chords on the I or VI.
Only two of the flat keys support the F Maj/D- chords.
These two flat lying keys are special because they are able to form the F maj/D- chords and therefore function as the horizontal member scales of F lydian (F Maj and F Maj b7).
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### NO F Maj/D- chords ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ]
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ]
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ]
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ]
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO I chord (F maj - now Ih) and VI chord (D- now VIh) being still intact : F Major = HTG ###
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO I chord ( F maj Ih) and VI chord (D- VIh) being still intact : F Maj b7 = HTG ###
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ] ### NO F Maj/D- chords ###
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
So there is no question that playing a Bb or Eb lydian scale over F Maj/D- chords leads to HTG.
But now to carry this further into the realm of speculation: It seems to me that any of the flat lying scales to F LYD, (even though Ab, Db, Gb, and Cb cannot form the F Maj/D- chords), when played over an F maj/D- chord, can resolve to the F maj/D- chords.
For instance, Ab Lydian 9 tone is a lot like the F blues scale, and can be played over F and resolves to F giving us Horizontal Tonal Gravity.
So I wonder if any time you play a flat lying lydian scale over a sharp lying chord you will get horizontal tonal gravity, or a scale that resolves to its underlying chord instead of being a unity with its underlying chord.
George says on p.214 that placing the lower above the higher leads to duality. And isn't duality part of his definition of HTG?
Last edited by chespernevins on Sun Feb 24, 2008 5:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Now check out the inverse of the above – the relationship of the sharp lying keys to F lyd.
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO CMG TONIC STATIONS (G Maj, E min) ###
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO CMG TONIC STATIONS (C Maj, A min) ###
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ]
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
F# G# A# B C# D# E [ E LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G# A B C# D# E [ A LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G# A B C# D E [ D LYD ] ### NO ASSOC. CMG TONIC STATIONS ###
F# G A B C# D E [ G LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO CMG TONIC STATIONS (G Maj, E min) ###
F# G A B C D E [ C LYD ] ### ASSOC. WITH F DUE TO CMG TONIC STATIONS (C Maj, A min) ###
F G A B C D E [ F LYD ] ### F LYD - HOME BASE ###
F G A Bb C D E [ Bb LYD ]
F G A Bb C D Eb [ Eb LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C D Eb [ Ab LYD ]
F G Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Db LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb C Db Eb [ Gb LYD ]
F Gb Ab Bb Cb Db Eb [ Cb LYD ]
I think I laid out something similar relative to bass 1/2 position on aaj cliff notes, albeit sans CMG analysis, which I am trying to grasp. You are definitely on to something. Thanks for getting me back into the Book. A walk through Chart A raises a variety of interesting questions.
10 {The artist formerly known as Bb}
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http://forums.allaboutjazz.com/showthre ... post365499
but, it's no big deal. Just thinking aloud about moving to the sharp side or the flat side on bass.
but, it's no big deal. Just thinking aloud about moving to the sharp side or the flat side on bass.
10 {The artist formerly known as Bb}
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Vertical & Horizontal Gravity must exist together, similar to how the trees and the forest exist together. Maybe the notion is more elusive like waves and particles. Russell alludes to something like this as Supra-Vertical Tonal Gravity. But it seems that I hallucinated VHTG or coined it to try to get at something on my mind. I'll attempt a graphic.
10 {The artist formerly known as Bb}
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Book Club Thread?
It might be interesting to develop a thread in which participants give a close read to one chapter at a time, posting questions and comments. A study group.
I never noticed the font color option.
I never noticed the font color option.
10 {The artist formerly known as Bb}