Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
The first thing that I'd like to mention about modes is, is that they don't really exist,
sort of. Really if you already know your major scales, you already know your modes. They're
one and the same. It's all in how you're looking at it or hearing it. I'll try to demonstrate.
So I'm going to stick with a C major scale to demonstrate. So I'll play a C major scale
first. So that sounds like a C major scale. Now if I take the exact same notes of a C
major scale, but I play it from D to D instead of from C to C, you're now hearing the C major
scale in a new mode.
So believe it or not, it sounds different, but it is all the same note from a C major
scale. So the notes I played for D, this new mode which happens to be D Dorian, is D-E-F-G-A-B-C-D.
It doesn't sound like C major, but it's the same notes as C major. You can do the same
thing from the next note of the scale.
So I'm going to play a C major scale from E to E and that's called Phrygian. The third
mode in major. There we go, so now that's Phrygian. The next mode is Lydian. That's
starting on the fourth note of the scale, so in this case it'll be F to F. The next mode is Mixolydian. That's playing
in this case in the key of C, from G to G. That's the fifth mode.
So there we have Mixolydian. There are two more modes left. We have Aeolian, which is
the sixth mode, from A to A in the key of C, and then lastly Locrian, from B to B. So every single mode that I played is just
notes of a C major scale. So if you really want to think about it, it's just C major,
but it's how you're hearing it and one way to actually hear it, is to understand that
there are cords that match each mode.