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When I Leave Here

 
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jconstant
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Joined: 16 Jul 2003
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Location: Southern California

PostPosted: Tue May 29, 2007 6:20 pm    Post subject: When I Leave Here Reply with quote

I've got the Handful transcription book here and I have two questions about this tune:

1) It says the key sig denotes F Dorian. I get that what means but I'm not sure why it is that way. When I look at the key sig, I see Eb major and I would call it Eb major. I understand that the F Dorian mode is the Eb major scale starting on F, but why write it this way?


2) Early in the guitar solo, Robben plays this nice little triplet lick in the bar right before the Bb7 (so the chords are going from I to the IV, or Fm7 to Bb7). The notes of this lick are F Ab A C Eb F Ab Bb so I thought I was looking at an Eb major scale- until I noticed that A in there. What scale am I dealing with here?

Thanks!
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FatTeleTom
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PostPosted: Wed May 30, 2007 5:37 am    Post subject: Re: When I Leave Here Reply with quote

jconstant wrote:
I understand that the F Dorian mode is the Eb major scale starting on F, but why write it this way?


From your second question, it sounds like Fm functions as the I chord here, right?

If so, then that's your answer to the first question:

Saying the tune is in Eb would imply that Eb major is the "home" chord/tonality.

Identifying it as F dorian, on the other hand, implies Fm as the "home" chord.
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jconstant
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PostPosted: Wed May 30, 2007 7:24 am    Post subject: Re: When I Leave Here Reply with quote

FatTeleTom wrote:
From your second question, it sounds like Fm functions as the I chord here, right?

Identifying it as F dorian, on the other hand, implies Fm as the "home" chord.


Yes, it sure does so that makes perfect sense. Thanks for the help.

Any idea as to what scale that little lick comes from?

Thanks,
Jim
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FatTeleTom
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PostPosted: Wed May 30, 2007 7:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hmm, could be he was thinking of the F H/W diminished scale there (I hate trying to spell scales without checking myself on an instrument, but that should be F, Gb, Ab, A, B, C, D, Eb).

If I recall correctly, Robben talks about using the diminished scale to go from the I to the IV chord, so that would fit (or was it going from the IV back to the I? Have to thing about that).

Of course, Ab and A are the minor and major third intervals up from F, so he might have just been playing with that minor/major tonality rub.

Do you know the time stamp in the song where that lick occurs?
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jconstant
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PostPosted: Wed May 30, 2007 8:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah, I thought it might be a diminshed thing at first but with only that A outside of the chord, I figured that's probably not it. It doesn't have that diminished sound.

And yes, it is the diminished scale Robben has talked about that works so well when going from the I to the IV. I've been working on that very part of the Back to the Blues DVD lately.

I think you're probably right with the minor/major thing.

It's the bar starting right at 2:30. Take a listen and let me know what you think.
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FatTeleTom
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 01, 2007 7:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I haven't had a chance to try playing along with it, but to my (mediocre) ears, I'd agree that it's not a diminished approach there.

So I think he was just thinking minor pentatonic there with the A as an added color note.

What a tune by the way--killer tone, great riff, and great vocals!

I keep hoping to work more on internalizing that "diminished as a I to IV transition" approach. So far, it's hard to make it sound fluid. I think I need to get the diminished stuff under my fingers/ears more comfortably.
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nineacres
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 5:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's a good example of using a diminished run when going from chord I to chord IV on Eric Johnson's Alien Love Child - Live and Beyond. The track is Don't Cha Know and the sequence is at 0.30. He really spells it out very clearly. Also, listen to "World Of Trouble" on the same CD where he uses the same progression several times.
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AlChuck
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PostPosted: Tue Jun 05, 2007 12:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
1) It says the key sig denotes F Dorian. I get that what means but I'm not sure why it is that way. When I look at the key sig, I see Eb major and I would call it Eb major. I understand that the F Dorian mode is the Eb major scale starting on F, but why write it this way?


One more thing about the choice of key signature... one might think that if the basic tonality of a tune is minor you might use the key signature of the relative major -- which would be Ab. But one of the practical rules of thumb is to use the key signature that results in using the fewest possible accidentals. So Eb is a better choice for this tune.
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