Modulating With Parallel Chains
Another method that one can use is doing the Parallel ii-V7-I
Modulating w/ Parallel ii-V-I Chains
ii- V Chains
Some tunes chain ii-V progressions then resolve to I chord. Any ii-V’s can be used. They work well because of the strong movement (up a 4th) of each ii-V. The example below chains several ii- V’s. It begins with a ii-V in the key of C Major, adds a ii-V in Db
Major, ends with ii- V- I in E Major.
Dm7 G7 | Ebm7 Ab7 |F#m7 B7 | EMa7
(ii - V in C -------) (ii - V in Db --) (ii- V -I in E ----------)
You can also simplify ii-V by playing only I or ii scale across both chords.
Parallel ii- V
Like ii-V-I chains, ii-V’s often move up or down by a constant interval, creating a parallel movement.
Chain Interval Example
1/2-step up Dm7- G7, Ebm7- Ab7
1/2-step down Dm7- G7, C#m7- F#7 (the V and ii is an augmented 4th apart)
1-step up Dm7- G7, Em7- A7
1-step down Dm7- G7, Cm7- F7 (circle of fourths)
4th up Dm7-G7, Gm7-C7 (the V and ii are on the same pitch)
Modulating with Parallel V-I Chains
Minor ii-V and V-i Chains
Minor ii-V progressions can be chained together to modulate. The example below modulates from C minor to Db minor to E minor. The ii chords are m7-5 in quality. This gives the feeling of minor ii-V progressions, even though the minor i chord is not actually played.
Dm7-5 G7-9| Ebm7-5 Ab7+9 | F#m7-5 B7-9| Em7
(ii- V in C min) (ii-V in Db minor) (ii-V-i in E minor -----)
Modulating with minor ii-V chains
Minor V-i progressions can also be chained together to modulate to other keys. The example below modulates from C minor to F# minor to Bb minor.
Dm7-5 G7-9 | Cm7 C#7+9 | F#m7 F7 | Bbm7
(ii- V- i in C minor ----) (V- i in F# min) (V- i in Bb minor--)
....................................... ...........................
Using Minor ii-V and V-i Chains
1) A V chord can resolve to a new I chord by moving down a half step, or up or down an augmented 4th.
2) A V chord can also resolve to a substitute I chord, such as the vi or iii.
3) ii- V- I progressions can be chained together to modulate to another key. The interval between each progression can be random or parallel.
4) ii-V progressions and V-I progressions can be chained together to modulate to another key.
5) V-I progressions usually start in an even-numbered position (halfway through a bar if there are two chords per bar, or on an even-numbered bar if one chord per bar).
6) Consecutive major, minor, or dominant chords can be used to modulate quickly.
* Other Resources on Modulation:
http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/09/modulation-progression.html
http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/11/minor-chord-progressions.html
http://ladydpiano.blogspot.com/2008/11/harmony-progressions.html
http://www.LadyDpiano.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
So nice to hear from you!