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Originally Posted by nailuj1987 geees... sure would like to know what ur talking bout there man... |
I think he is explaining the Tri-tone subsitution (#4 away from root )
When you have a II-V-I lets say in the key of C
So we would get Dmin (II) - G7 (V) - Cmaj (I)
Instead of playing G7 (V) you would play Db which is a tri-tone (#4) away from G
This is very common in Jazz
So you would now come up with
Dmin - Db- Cmaj notice it's a chromatic run
And about the quadural structures I learnt this from our knowledgable DB players
You can use any interval too provided you have enough bars this is a trick that I'm working on
So let me explain in detail
Now taking his example going up in minor thirds from say C
( use any pattern or licks by the way ) so we'll stick to the bassics triads ( 1-3-5 )
So you will get C ( C,E,G ) then up a minor third from C you'll get Eb ( Eb,G,Bb ) then up a minor third from Eb you'll get Gb ( Gb,Bb,Db) then A ( A,C#,E ) then you come back to C
It works out logically this is a trick that saxaphone players use
But if you're still having trouble understanding maybe get a teacher