Guitar Player

Pentatonic Substituti­ons, Part 2

The conclusion of our presentati­on of some musically useful and colorful applicatio­ns of a familiar scale

- BY TOM KOLB

Part 1 of this lesson, LAST MONTH, IN we looked at the interrelat­ionships between pentatonic scales and the major and natural minor scales and saw how major and minor pentatonic­s can be repurposed and substitute­d over various tonal centers to create fresh-sounding melodic ideas that have a familiar feel under your fingers, due to the scale’s “open” structure and easily visualized fretboard shapes. In this second and final installmen­t, we’ll delve into some more appealing applicatio­ns of this five-note scale and look at ways that it can be used in relative modal tonalities.

MODAL IMPLICATIO­NS

It stands to reason that if specific pentatonic scales can be used to represent all the notes of a major and natural minor scale, then pentatonic patterns can be called on to outline popular modes such as Dorian, which is the second mode of the major scale and

b3, is intervalli­cally spelled 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, b7,

and Mixolydian, which is the major scale’s 5th mode, spelled 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, b7.

Let’s tackle Dorian first.

Had Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia or the Doors’ Robbie Krieger been called to play on a Steely Dan session, the outcome may have sounded like

12. Centered around a Gm chord, the Ex. progressio­n is specifical­ly G Dorian

Bb,

(G, A, C, D, E, F) by nature. The licks are designed from neighborin­g G minor

Bb, pentatonic (G, C, D, F) and A minor pentatonic (A, C, D, E, G) scales. Combined, the two scales represent all seven notes of G Dorian.

Now imagine the more likely scenario of Larry Carlton on that same Steely Dan session (he played on many), and something similar to may have

Ex. 13 been the result. Again, G and A minor pentatonic scales are applied but D minor pentatonic is added to the stew. As a general rule, the minor pentatonic patterns based on the 1st, 2nd and 5th scale degrees of the Dorian mode are perfect candidates for the pentatonic pairing approach.

Let’s just go in order and hit Phrygian (the third mode of the major scale,

b2, b3, b6, intervalli­cally spelled 1, 4, 5, b7) next. is a fusion-style example

Ex. 14

(think Carlos Santana mind-melding with Al Di Meola) that’s played over a

i-bII classic Phrygian vamp. The fiery lines employ neighborin­g pentatonic

b7th patterns based on the root and of the mode. The tonic position (E minor pentatonic) establishe­s the basic minor

b7th tonality while the position (D minor

b2 pentatonic) brings out the signature sound of the Phrygian mode.

Next in line is Lydian, the fourth mode of the major scale. It’s scale

#4, structure (1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7) is so similar to the major scale’s that it is often used by jazz and fusion players as a substitute for Ionian (the modal name for the major scale), the only difference being that the 4th is raised, or “sharped,” in Lydian

(#4).

The Lydian mode really comes to life in major progressio­ns that incorporat­e a II (two major) chord, as in the big ’80s example in 15. Here, D

Ex. and G major pentatonic scales are strewn across the landscape for a distinctiv­e G

C#, F#)

Lydian (G, A, B, D, E, outcome. This example secretly houses a rocker’s trick: To imply the Lydian mode, play the minor pentatonic scale a half-step below the root of the key. From that viewpoint, F#

minor pentatonic (same notes as the A major pentatonic scale) is doing the heavy lifting in bars 2 and 3.

We come next to the mighty Mixolydian mode (the fifth mode of the

b7). major scale, spelled 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,

Mixolydian is a common occurrence in all styles of music because it aligns with the ubiquitous dominant 7th chord (1, 3,

b7).

5, This mode is so important that we’ll honor it with three examples in different styles, all based on the same pentatonic tradeoff maneuver.

is an Zeppelin-esque, A

Ex. 16

C#, F#, Mixolydian (A, B, D, E, G) riff example exhibiting the rockabilly influences on Jimmy Page’s style. It is constructe­d using neighborin­g A and G major pentatonic patterns.

is a Southern rock-flavored

Ex. 17 example, fashioned in the classic Allman Brothers Band/Dickey Betts style. Also in A Mixolydian, it uses the same neighborin­g patterns (an octave up the fretboard), and includes several slick position-shift slides.

is a funky E Mixolydian (E,

Ex. 18

F#, G#, C#,

A, B, D) passage crafted for hybrid picking (combinatio­n of pick and finger[s]). Based on sliding 6ths intervals (see Ex. 4), it carves a path across Patterns 5MA and 1MA of D and E major pentatonic­s. (The formula to remember for Mixolydian is to play major pentatonic­s from the root and b7th

of the scale.)

Locrian (the seventh mode of the

b2, b3, b5, b6, b7) major scale, spelled 1, 4, is the oddball mode of the bunch but can be used to great sinister effect in heavy metal and hard rock. (In case you think we’re skipping over Aeolian, the sixth mode of the major scale, we already covered it in Examples 3–9. As Ionian is the modal name for the major scale, Aeolian is the modal name for its relative minor, or “natural minor” scale.)

features a flashy E Locrian

Ex. 19

Bb,

(E, F, G, A, C, D) passage that crisscross­es A minor and F major pentatonic patterns over a power-chord progressio­n that resembles a deranged reimaginin­g of the “Peter Gunn” riff.

For Locrian, the formula to remember is: minor pentatonic from the 4th degree,

b2nd. and major pentatonic from the NON-DIATONIC APPLICATIO­NS Who’d have thought you could cast jazz phrases using pentatonic scales? Such is the case in the ii - V7 - I passage in

Ex. 20. Bars 1 and 2 disclose a chromatic approach used to great effect by jazz-rock fusion players like Larry Carlton and Scott Henderson. The ploy is to ascend chromatica­lly using matching pentatonic patterns, in this case A minor pentatonic

Bb (Bb, Db, Eb, Ab) to minor pentatonic F,

F#, to B minor pentatonic (B, D, E, A).

A minor pentatonic represents a slice

Bb of the D Dorian mode (see Ex. 13); minor pentatonic notes nail the altereddom­inant iterations of the G7 chord

b5, #5, b9, #9

— the — along with a “passing” major 7th; and B minor pentatonic casts a Lydian flavor over the Cmaj9 chord (see Ex. 15). The second

Ab half of the example tucks an minor

(Ab, Cb, Db, Eb, Gb) pentatonic phrase between matching patterns of D minor and E minor pentatonic­s. The latter two are diatonic substituti­ons covered in

Ab previous examples. However, the

b9th, minor pentatonic notes hit the

b5th, #5th,

3rd, and passing maj7th of the G7 chord.

Perhaps the most common usage of non-diatonic substituti­on is in dominant blues phrases that combine parallel (different modalities that share the same tonic note) major and minor pentatonic scales. provides one such example,

Ex. 21 played in the context of a classic ending phrase for a 12-bar blues in C. Here, overlappin­g scale patterns of C major pentatonic and C minor pentatonic are used for minor-to-major-3rd trade-offs (Eb to E), and balancing acts between

b7th (Bb) major 6th (A) and note choices.

puts a capper on this lesson

Ex. 22 with a slippery lick that superimpos­es a series of minor pentatonic scale notes via a chromatica­lly ascending lick. A solid blues-rock phrase establishe­s the key center (A minor) then a classic threenote lick is transforme­d up the fretboard in a series of half-step hand-offs, courtesy of a legato finger slide for each maneuver. The target is Pattern 4mi of the A minor pentatonic scale at the 12h fret. The lesson to be learned from this example is “inside/outside” licks work best when bookended with consonant phrases that match the tonal center.

If you’re intrigued by this last example, here’s a good starting point to practice slipping in-and-out of tonality: Use the neighborin­g patterns explained in the Dorian examples (12 and 13), and pass between them using notes from a

Ab matching pattern of minor pentatonic. It will probably seem weird to do this at first, but, used sparingly, this method can be very effective. Good luck!

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Dickey Betts
Al Di Meola
THEORY Dickey Betts Al Di Meola
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For audio of this lesson, go to guitarplay­er.com/april21-lesson1
MORE ONLINE! For audio of this lesson, go to guitarplay­er.com/april21-lesson1
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