
Rusty the Scoob wrote:They go from progressively light to progressively dark as you flat each note, in this order:
Lydian
Aeolian (Major)
Myxolydian
Dorian
Ionian (Minor)
Phrygian
Locrian
Try them all over the same root and you'll see what I mean.
Picking the right scale for a tune is a lifelong process to learn. In general if it sounds majorish try Myxolidian, if minorish try Dorian. There will be exceptions but those are the two most important and will cover most of the GD.

tcsned wrote:Dorian - dark, strange/trippy - this is a cousin to the Lydian scale. This one also has the augmented or raised 4th and gives this dark scale a trippy feel. I use an E Dorian scale for Dark Star (A / G / chord progression).

Rusty the Scoob wrote:Great post except for this:tcsned wrote:Dorian - dark, strange/trippy - this is a cousin to the Lydian scale. This one also has the augmented or raised 4th and gives this dark scale a trippy feel. I use an E Dorian scale for Dark Star (A / G / chord progression).
Dorian has a regular 4th, same as Major, Mixo, Minor, etc. Good way to tell: A raised 4th would mean that there's a jump of 1 1/2 steps between the 3rd and 4th and no mode of the major/minor scale has more than a full-step jump.
tcsned wrote:Duh! You're right, I was making the mistake of thinking w/o a guitar in my handIt's a flatted 6th not an augmented 4th. Which, in essence, creates an augmented 5th interval against the root which would still give a strange, unsettling feel. Any of those scales that mess with the 4 or 5 is gonna be a little trippy. Thanks for catching that Rusty!


tcsned wrote:Dangit Rusty stop being right!
Lol - I have a hard time thinking w/o a guitar
Rusty the Scoob wrote:tcsned wrote:Dangit Rusty stop being right!
Lol - I have a hard time thinking w/o a guitar
So do I, when it comes to songs, but scales I know pretty well. Making videos actually really helps me remember them better, I should get back on that project.

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