Lesson 4
Modal Mixture
- The "mixing" or "borrowing" of parallel modes from each other is known as modal mixture.
- Mixture mostly happens in major keys. When the bIII and bVII chords are "borrowed" from the parallel minor scale.
- Common mixtures are those that include a b6.
- The way to identify modal mixture, is seeing one or more chords from the parallel minor being used in the piece.
Image showing Modal Mixture in a piece of Music-Reference-MODAL Mixture-OPEN MUSIC THEORY
Image Showing Modal mixtures and how if they are diatonic to the key Reference-Fundamentals. Function and Form-MILNE Library
This Video shows using modulation upwards and downwards to combine multiple modes over one chord is the topic of this episode.
This Video shows that a modular mix consists of multiple scales with a common tonal center. Included are other non-modal options in the jam track video accompanying this article since we traditionally only use modes of the Major Scale.
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