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Subject:Re: [RESOGUIT-L] Soloing and Nashville Numbering
Date:Monday, March 3, 2008  12:46:37 (-0800)
From:Tom Foote <footet @.........edu>


Hey, Pat--

     it'd be easier to refer to standard notation because that's what  
everyone
     else uses.. i.e.,     upper case Major   lower case Minor

     I   ii  iii  IV  V  vi  vii dim   (ordinarily it has a little  
circle like the degree symbol)

     this is how Music Theory is depicted on most sites we'd go to


On Mar 3, 2008, at 9:36 AM, Pat Walker wrote:

> You can play any of the major scale notes as long as the chord is  
> is built
> on that major scale. So play major on the I, IIm, IIIm, IV, V, and  
> VIm.
> Sometimes the major scale notes sound a little "square" on the V  
> chord - the
> blues pentatonic scale (again built off the I or tonic) can work  
> better in
> these situations.
>
> The most common other common chords you will encounter that are not  
> in the
> same key as the ones listed above are the II, III, VI, and the  
> bVII. There
> are modal formulas that will guide you as to what scale to play on  
> these
> chords, but for practical purposes I have just learned what note  
> makes the
> chord deviate from the key and make sure that I play that note.
>
> I know your question was based on the key of A, but I tend to  
> process my
> dobro theory in terms of G. So for a A chord (II) play a C# instead  
> of a C.
> For B (III), play a D# instead of D. For E (VI) play a G# instead  
> of G, and
> for F (bVIII), play an F instead of F#.
>
> Hope that helps.
>
> Pat Walker
>
> On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 10:57 AM, Randy McClure  
> <rpmcclure@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>  Besides the D, F# & A (the IV chord in
>> A major), what other notes can I play in my solo while the tune is at
>> IV?  Same question when the song goes to the V chord?  At the I chord
>> I assume anything on the A major scale works, right?
>
>
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