Post by TDPost by Joey GoldsteinJust started working out of the Thesauras again (for some reason) and
can't quite grok the "Master Chord" designations yet.
In the Introduction he explains that the Master chords are dom7 chords
with 5th omitted and are designated by circled Arabic numerals 1 through 12.
I'm assuming that 1 is C7, 2 is C#7, 3 is D7, etc., through 12 which is B7.
But that doesn't seem to completely agree with his examples on page v of
the Intro or with any of the patterns, as far as I can tell.
So what exactly do the circled numbers really refer to?
--
Joey Goldstein
<http://www.joeygoldstein.com>
<http://homepage.mac.com/josephgoldstein/AudioClips/audio.htm>
joegold AT primus DOT ca
The numbers correspond to drawing from his three realms: Tritone
181 thru 391 and Sesquitone pogression: 392 thru 568. Page "V" (Of
introduction) displays examples in the three respective realms. In
example V, you have the tritone C and F#. {Circled numbers, as realms
must be utilized in conjunction with the pattern numbers, even though
many will be the same inter-realm}This correlates with his F#7 and C7
triads (5th omitted). The G and Db, also a tritone are added tones,
each a P5 above each principle tone (of the initial tritone). He
considers the additional tritone (G and Db), "melodic elements" of
which he adds to C and F#. Leaving the 5th out of the master chords,
frees the ear up to accept bitonality. I have no problem with pattern
53 fitting the masterchords. In Jazz, we will voice much hipper than
that and still leave the fifth out. Of course,, youm are hip to this.
I am just trying to answer you as best I can at the moment.
The next double barline example, Pattern #186 reveals two sets of
augmented triads. You already know that in the land of "Augie
Augment", major 7ths and dom 7ths entertain harmonic coalition. This
sounds like a plausible pattern/line to me, if we keep this in mind.
The next double barline example, pattern # 393 reveals quite obviously
two diminished chords juxtaposed a la double-diminished. The
masterchords correspond accordingly. But I wouldn't try this stuff on
an accordion.
Is how I see it. He is demonstarting bi-tonality and the idea of
melodic patterns mixed in with known and not so known scales (hybrids)
is "key."
-TD
This is correct. Page 244 lays out the master chords for the 3
divisions of the octave: Tritone, Ditone and Sesquitone. I
In the Tritone section (scales and patterns 1-180), each master chord
(the circled number) refers specifically to a tritone pair of dom 7th
(minus the 5th) chords. 1 is C and F#, 2 is Db and G, etc. So, if a
pattern has the circled numbers 1, 3, 5, 9 and 11, as scale 28 does,
the harmonization for that pattern would be F#7/C7, Ab7/D7, Bb7/E7, D7/
Ab7, E7/Bb7.
In the Ditone section, where the octave is divided in major 3rds, each
master chord refers to a trio of dom 7 chords (no 5th) for patterns
181-391. Pattern 295 has master chords 5, 6, 11, 12. These would
translate into: Bb7/D7/F#7, B7/Eb7/G7, E7/Ab7/C7, F7/A7/Db7.
The Sesquitone section is the octave divided in minor 3rds. It
follows the same principle, only each master chord represents 4
chords. Pattern 482 has master chords 6 and 12. The harmonies would
be B7/D7/F7/Ab7 and F7/Ab7/B7/D7.
Hope that helps a little.