The biggest thing I've noticed when listening to other players is their ability to "follow the changes" - not even really in a Jazz sense.
If a track goes from one key to another it's very easy to follow that with a solo/lead playing, but I've found it super hard to follow chords within a key. For example, going from Am to Em in your typical rock song.
To clarify: if I stay in the key of Em when I'm soloing over the Am I'm essentially playing A Dorian, a mode of E Aeolian - so literally nothing is changing. I guess the solution is to play A Aeolian then E Aeolian and just take that major/minor six clash as flavour?
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This isn't a particularly strong harmonic movement in any case, but if you just play the Em scale over these two chords without consideration for the chord tones, you will just happen to play A Dorian by default, it won't really 'sound' like A Dorian if that makes sense? The melodies will sound weak because of it.
If we expand this a little and take the chord tones of Am7 - A C E G and Em7 - E G B D. See how they share the notes E and G and the others are a scale step away? Start and end your phrases on these chord tones, trying to connect smoothly from on to the next when the chords change. Then gradually add in more notes from the respective modes one at a time. If you add the 6th over the Am for example, that will really pop out at you because of the way it acts in relation to the chord tones of Am.
Or take the same approach and use Em Pentatonic and Am Pentatonic and again, add some colour tones here and there.
Be careful thinking E Aeolian and A Aeolian is the solution, depending on the song your ear may very well reject this approach unless your phrasing is really good.
Keep things simple at first because it's not easy but it can be made to work, it just takes a little time and effort
You just have to sing beautiful melodies in your mind’s ear and learn how to lay them down on the fretboard. Use chromatics to make things even smoother. It’s a journey. I don’t think there are many tips that will help - they’ll all be mechanical systems that don’t actually work as well as your instinct anyway.
Supportact said: [my style is] probably more an accumulation of limitations and bad habits than a 'style'.
What it is, is a new chord which changes the function of the notes that you are playing...that all sounds a bit scary but, as you develop your ear, it becomes more intuitive (don’t want to be doing too much hard thinking when you’re soloing).
Part of that ear development will bring better phrasing (it’s all about phrasing) which might mean that you don’t drop the money shot too early as you described
Adding to @Brad ‘s excellent advice above...
Be aware of the underlying chords...practice playing over chord changes by using chord tones...slow and steady with root, third, and fifth on quarter notes...add the seventh...speed it up...and so on...try and keep it ‘musical’ if you can (I find it hard to be this disciplined).
Supportact said: [my style is] probably more an accumulation of limitations and bad habits than a 'style'.
Feedback
try to become aware of the chord shapes of the progression in the general area that you'll be playing the solo..
this is so that you are aware of the consonant notes for each chord as these are generally [but not absolutely always] the notes you'd look for to land on at the end of a lick, or to hold onto / bend onto for the longer sustained notes..
if you have plenty of stock licks in your vocabulary, experiment with them..
modify them so that they land on consonant notes for the chords in the progression
some will sound great, others not..
trial and error / cause and effect
the main thing here is that your experiments have a purpose..
you're actively looking for something in your licks, and if they don't fit.. bend them around until they do..
then the question is.. does it still sound cool??
I think a lot of times guitarists move to different areas of the neck before they really know one area...eventually you should hear and play the sound in your head by knowing what each note sounds like ...so much can be just done with 5 notes for example..
Say when playing over a Change from C to Dm, I should change to D phrygian (second mode of C major ?) rather than say jump to D Dorian which is also minor so should work?
I'm not talking about modes at all..
just a chord progression in a single key..
like I, IV, V in C [C, F, G]
so... just using the notes in the key of C major
and being mindful of the chords that you're playing over in that key..
EDIT for clarification
I draw a clear distinction that many do not when it comes to the use of modes...
if a progression is in the key of C for example, you are playing a solo in the key of C
and if the chord of G is sounding, you are not playing G mixolydian
you are simply playing in the key of C over chord V
to my mind [and some folks get angsty with me about this] playing modally is something different
Seriously: If you value it, take/fetch it yourself
a few questions may help..
In the key of C
- what is chord I? C
- what is chord IV? F
In the key of Am
- what is chord I? Am
- what is chord IV? Dm
note that the keys of C and Am contain the same pool of notes..
but when I play in the key of Am, never at any point do I feel like I'm using the notes from the key of C even though I'm choosing notes from the same note pool..
this is a difference that I'd hope that we can all feel and understand.
so.. when chord V is sounding in C, I'm still in the key of C playing but playing over chord V.
This is not playing with modes, it's just music using the conventional major scale.
And the same applies to the minor scale too.
the relationship between key, scale and chord is fixed.
I think of modes as being more fluid and less 'fixed'
but I do in a sense consider a mode as being a scale and essentially a sort of key in it's own right
so just to help me get a point over...
In the key of D Dorian
- what is chord I? Dm
- what is chord IV? A
just like the key of Am, it shares the same note pool as the key of C
but.... just like Am, you are never actually playing in C
you're essentially playing in the key of "Dm with a major 6th"
so the "less fixed" part about modes is that you can dip in and out of them to introduce new tonal colouration without needing a key change [without modulating].
In the key of Am
- what is chord I? Am
- what is chord IV? Dm
what if I used A Dorian over the Am... I'm still consonant and diatonic with the chord of Am because A Dorian contains the notes of the chord Am [A, C, E]. It 's the maj6th [F#] that introduces a little extra spice..
however, when the progression changes to chord IV [Dm] A Dorian no longer works because Dm contains an F, and A Dorian contains an F#. So I'll revert to the key of Am handle the Dm.. and it'll feel like playing in Am over chord IV.
Alternatively we could treat A Dorian as if it were a key in its own right which means chord IV is now D instead of Dm..
Which is a cool effect in its own right..
My take is therefore that the major and minor keys / cales are fixed in how they function.
Modes provide extra spice adding alternatives that you can drop onto a single chord within a progression and so are a little more flexible..
my other "rule of thumb" is about how contemporary music works with the maj6th and min7th
very often [but not always], I'll opt for the maj6th and min7th intervals [where I can get away with it because it just works and sounds really cool..
playing in:
a minor key with the maj6th and min7th is Dorian
a major key with the maj6th and min7th is Mixolydian
there will be chords though that will force you to switch back to being minor or major [unless there's something else I can get away with that sounds cool to me]..
so...
in Am
chords I, III, V: play in A Dorian
chords II, IV, VI, VII: play in Am
the major key is a little different.. some songs will really want to pin you to major tonality..
others will love it when you get a little 'blue' and start introducing Mixo tonality..
as always... it's about context
Seriously: If you value it, take/fetch it yourself
“Playing modally” is quite a different thing; if you were playing a piece in C Dorian for example, like greensleeves, or hooray and up she rises, or whatever, you’d be in C minor but using a raised 6th - A# instead of A.
It can be handy to use mode names as a shorthand to describe certain things (like in a blues in A you could think of playing A mixolydian, D mixolydian and E mixolydian, instead of saying ‘play major chords but flatten the 7th of each one’).
Supportact said: [my style is] probably more an accumulation of limitations and bad habits than a 'style'.
if you take it literally, you're substituting the melodic content / melodic characteristics of a mode that is outside of the of the chord progression onto a single chord simply because it fits..
in Em.. we can play in Em throughout... which is cool, well understood
then chord VI shows up as a triad... no 7th.. hmmmm.. that means it's just a C triad and not Cmaj7..
and at that moment.. no one in the rest of the band / ensemble are playing the B [the 7th of chord VI in the key of Em..
yummy... we can exploit this moment..
so what if we played C Mixolydian at that moment??
C Mix contains the C, the E, and the G so it's consonant with the C chord..
but it contains the Bb... there's the "spice"..
take it further...
chords Em to C...
over Em no one else in the band plays a C.. so we can get all E Dorian
the C shows up and we're C Mix...
the chord progression still have the underlying 'vibe' [for want of a better term] of being in the key of Em
but the solo you just threw down is now super sexy..
what you are doing is exploiting the notes that are missing from the chords to allow you to introduce this extra 'outside stuff'
whilst remaining consonant with the sounding chords...
this is where modes are at their most flexible...
but as you said... treating a mode as if it were a key in it's own right is also a thing of great beauty..
now how about blending the 2 ideas...
a Dorian derived chord progression.. whilst using melodic substitution too..
you can never have too much spice... lol..
absolutely...
and just like the difference between keys of Cmaj and Am..
the difference is.... what is chord I?
chord I in C is C, chord I in Am is Am
and likewise.. chord I in D Dorian is Dm..
so.. when you right out a chord progression, would you ever write I, I, I, I
by the way that's Ionian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Ionian with the key centre of C
of course you wouldn't ... lol..