On the first look I thought it would be in D, because a verse starts and ends with a D-chord, and also this walk up is heading for the D chord, but then I looked at the riffs and they weren't in D, also the main chords are D, C, G and Em. That meant for me it's in G.... so what is it now, I just want to be sure.
thanks
Could jesus microwave a burrito so hot that he himself could not eat it?
-Homer Simpson-
i use d mixolydian.....how does everyone else do the end build up shrills?(if thats what they're even called, but I'm sure people know what i mean, i hope)
golden rule: treat other people alright, other people will usually treat you cool.
never been one for figuring out what mode I'm playing.. in fact I've never met anyone who think's of modes while in mid solo... fact is, if you're staying in key and playing over the chords that are going on in the background (rhythm guitar/keys/etc) you're just fine
took me a while with this one.. in fact I've got a decent version of MD up on my band's myspace... there's definately a key change at the 2nd half of the verses (i.e. "... I can't walk you out, in the morning dew, my honey..." etc.) which is the same as the jam at the end (F C F C em D)
I play in G over the 1st part of the verse and then switch to C for the 2nd... make sense? ... my uneducated guess would be that that is the same as D mixo and F mixo???
I just lump them together into a mode I crafted myself called Boukxolydian... second only to the legendary Burigienian mode (inside joke)
Apparently I have been playing my leads in Boukxolydian mode all this time with out even knowing it. I'm with you. The G maj (D mixo) works well because it it has the F# for the D chord but as soon as the change comes with the F chord then you need to toss that F# for a F and you have a C maj scale.
As far as building the shrill, I play this with my right hand going as fast as possible just following the F>C>Em>D chord structure