Bass Lessons

Bass Lessons - Bass Lessons bass tab

Lesson 4 - Major Scales, Keys, Chord Changes, and the Circle

of Fifths

In the last lesson, we talked about creating bass lines based

on the chords

of the song being played. In this lesson, we'll talk about scales,

which

determine which chords are used in a song and in what sequence,

and we'll

work through major scales and give some examples of common songs

built on

major scales and some common chord changes. We'll also introduce

the Circle of

Fifths, which is something most bass players have heard of and

all of them

should know perfectly. Knowing the common chord patterns will

make it much

easier to learn songs off records, because it lets you make accurate

guesses

about where the bass line is likely to go, and it will also help

you in writing

songs if you are interested in doing that.

The first thing to observe is that although there are 12 different

notes

in music (A, B flat, C, D flat, and so on up to A flat), most songs

don't use

all of those notes: in fact, most don't use any more than 7 of them.

Which

notes are used in a given song is determined by the key of the song,

and the

choice of a key gives the composer (or bass player) a guide to

choosing the

chords and notes he wants to use in writing the song (or the bass

line). And,

if you know what key a song is in, then it will help you figure out

the bass

line to that song, because it gives you a good guide as to what

notes might

be used in the song's bass line and which notes will not be used.

The notes that are associated with a given key are called a scale.

For

example, we might want to write a song in they key of C major, and

if we did

that we'd use the notes from the C major scale. That scale is:

C, D, E, F, G,

A, B, C; all the white keys on the piano and none of the black keys.

You can

play that scale at a piano or on your bass: on the bass, the notes

are:

G-----------------2--4--5--

D--------2--3--5-----------

A--3--5--------------------

E--------------------------

If you play this scale, you'll notice that it has a very comfortable,

familiar

sound to it; that's because major scales are the most widely

used scales in

music. There's nothing magical about C as the choice of a starting

note: you

can create a major scale starting on any note you like, and there

will be a

major key associated with that scale. The thing that defines

a major scale

is that it contains 7 notes, and they are all a whole step apart

except for

the 3rd and 4th note which are a half-step apart. (There is also

a half-step

between the 7th note and the next octave of the 1st note.) Thus,

you can

create the D major scale by starting on D and going up by whole

steps, except

after the 3rd (and 7th) note. Thus, the D major scale would be:

D, E, F#,

G, A, B, C#, D. Note the half-step between F# and G, and between

C# and D.

You can play this scale on your bass like this:

G-----------------4--6--7--

D--------4--5--7-----------

A--5--7--------------------

E--------------------------

Notice that this pattern is exactly the same as the C major scale

above,

except that it's two frets higher. In fact, this same general

pattern will form

a major scale starting on any string, at any fret. For example,

the F major

scale looks like this:

G--------------------------

D-----------------0--2--3--

A--------0--1--3-----------

E--1--3--------------------

which is the same fingering pattern, starting at the 1st fret

of the E string.

A song written using these 7 notes would be said to be in the key

of F major

You can keep going up the fingerboard if you like, starting again

on the new

new F: if you do this you'll repeat the 1st note as the 8th note,

the 2nd

note as the 9th note, and so on. In F major, the result would look

like this:

G-----------------------------2--3--5--7--9--10

D-----------------0--2--3--5-------------------

A--------0--1--3-------------------------------

E--1--3----------------------------------------

and you can see that the 2nd note and the 9th note are both G, and

3rd note

and the 10th note are both A, etc. Sometimes G will be called the

2nd or the

9th, depending on the circumstances.

Once you've chosen a key for the song, you can then start choosing

the chords

to use in the song. Because you now only have 7 notes to choose

from, the

number of chords you can form is reduced. For example, suppose

you are writing

in the key of C major, and you want to form a chord with C as the root

note.

You can't use C minor, because that requires an E-flat, which

is not a note

of the C major scale. However, you can form the C major chord,

by using the

1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the scale: C, E, and G. (This is why the

three

notes of the C major chord are called 1st, 3rd, and 5th: they are

the 1st,

3rd and 5th note of the C major scale). If you wanted to form a chord

with

D as the root note, you can't form D major (it requires a F-sharp)

but you

can form D minor using D, F, and A, the 2nd, 4th, and 6th notes of

the scale.

So, if you are writing in the key of C major, you will end up using

the chord

D minor rather than D major. If you wanted to form a four-note

chord with

G as the root, you would use the G, B, D, and F (the 5th, 7th, 9th,

and 11th

notes) and you would get a G7 chord.

The main purpose of choosing a key is to guide you in selecting

the chords

to use in your song. Consider, for example, the song "You Shook

Me All Night

Long" by AC-DC. It's in the key of G major and goes like this:

Verse: (repeat as needed)

G C G C G D G D G D

G-----------|------------------|------------|----------------

D-----------|------------------|------------|----------------

A---------3-|-3--3-----3-----5-|-5--5--r----|-------5-----5--

E---3--r----|-------3-----3----|----------3-|-3--3-----3-----

She was a fast machine, she kept her motor clean, she was the best

damn

woman that I've ever seen.

Chorus: (repeat as needed)

G C Bm D C Bm

G-------------|---------|------------|----------

D-------------|---------|------------|----------

A-----0--2--3-|-3--2--5-|-5--0--2--3-|-3--2-----

E--3----------|---------|------------|-------3--

You Shook me All Night Long You really shook me yeah,

The bass plays mostly root notes. Between the verse and chorus

the bass line

makes two changes: first, it plays only roots in the verse, but

starts playing

some passing notes between roots in the chorus; and second, the verse

contains rests between long notes, but in the chorus there are

no rests and

the notes are connected to one another.

However, the main thing to notice about this song at the moment

is the

choice of chords. The song is on the G major scale: G, A, B, C, D,

E, F#, G.

In TAB it looks like this:

G--------------------------

D-----------------2--4--5--

A-----0--2--3--5-----------

E--3-----------------------

and notice that all of the notes of the bass line, even the passing

notes in

the chorus, come from this scale. The chords used are G major

(G,B,D), C

major (C, E, G), D major (D, F#, A) and B minor (E, G, B), and all

of those

notes come from the G major scale as well. In fact, in the whole

song, both

guitar parts, bass line, and vocal line together, you won't

find any notes

that are not part of the G major scale.

In general, once you've chosen a key, you've chosen whether

to have major

or minor chords for each of the notes in the scale, and what kind

of 7th to

use if you use one. I'll work out the chords for the G major scale,

but you

should notice that you'll always get the same types of chords

for any major

scale you might pick:

G major scale: G, A, B, C, D, E, F#, [ G, A, B, C, D, E ]

Root Note Notes Chord 7th 7th chord

G G,B,D G major F# G maj7

A A,C,E A minor G A min7

B B,D,F# B minor A B min7

C C,E,G C major B C maj7

D D,F#,A D major C D7

E E,G,B E minor D E min7

F# F#,A,C F# dim E E half-dim7

In general, in a major key the chords formed using the 1st, 4th,

and 5th

scale note are major, the ones formed on the 2nd, 3rd, and 6th

notes are minor,

and the one on the 7th note is diminished. You can refer to the

chord simply

by the number of the scale note that is the root note: so we say

that in the

key of G major, D major is the fifth chord. Usually it's written

out using

Roman numerals, so that we say that in the key of G, G major is the

I chord,

A minor is the II chord, C major is the IV chord, etc.

Now that we know what root notes to use to form chords, and what

type of

chords (major, minor, 7th) to use, we've pretty much decided

which chords can

be used and which can't be. The next question is, in what order

should we

use these chords? The answer is, you can use them in pretty much

any order

you want, except that the song should begin and end on the I chord.

However,

there are some very common patterns that are used. One of them

we've already

run into in Wipeout and the 12-bar blues: it is the pattern

I IV I V I

where the first I chord gets 4 measures and each of the other chords

gets two

measures. There are a number of other common patterns. For example,

there is:

I IV I V I

which is the basic pattern from I Saw Her Standing There, by the

Beatles. It

is in the key of E, and uses the chords E, A and B7.

E A E

Well she looked at me, and I, I could see

B7

That before too long, I'd fall in love with her...

E A

Yeah I'll never dance with another, oooh

E B7 E

Since I saw her standing there.

A twist on this pattern is to present the V and IV chords in the

other order.

For example, there is

I V IV I

which is the basic pattern of the chorus of Fortunate Son, by

Creedence

Clearwater Revival It's in G major so it uses G, D, and C as chords.

G D C G

It ain't me, It ain't me, I ain't no Senator's son, no.

G D C G

It ain't me, It ain't me, I ain't no Fortunate Son.

You can also throw in some common minor chords. A very very common

pattern in jazz music is

I II V7 I

where the II chord is minor. However, since most jazz songs don't

have words,

it's hard to provide an example. You'll have to trust me that

if you listen

to jazz you'll hear it a lot.

You can also use the sequence:

I VI IV V I

where the VI chord is minor. This pattern is the basis of the song

"Lollipop"

with each chord getting one measure. In the key of F major it'd

go like this:

F Dm B flat C7

Lollipop, lollipop, oh lollie, lollipop (repeat ad nausem)

Try playing these chords on a piano or guitar and you'll see that

they sound

quite natural played in that order. However, if you play the

D minor chord

as major instead (using the F# instead of F) you'll find it a little

jarring,

because the F# is not a note of the F major scale.

You can also use II instead of IV, if you want to get a second minor

chord

into the sequence:

I VI II V I

One song that does that is the following popular folk song, Today,

which is

in D major and uses D, B minor, E minor, and A7 chords:

D Bm Em A7

Today, while the blossoms still cling to the vine

D Bm Em A7

I'll taste your strawberries, I'll drink your sweet wine

D Bm Em A7

A million tommorows will all pass away

D Bm Em A7 D

Ere I forget all the joy that is mine, today.

Folk music in particular tends to use very common chord changes

and repeat

them over and over, and if you want to develop your ability to

recognize the

common changes, it's not a bad idea to listen to some folk music

because you

will hear them very clearly there.

There is one last piece of information about chord patterns

that every bass

player ought to know. It summarizes all the information about

how chords move

from one to the next in a simple way. It's called the Circle of

Fifths,

and it's created by writing out the 12 notes in this order: each

note is

followed by the 5th note of its major scale. Thus, if we start

with C, we

follow it with G (the 5th note of the C major scale). We follow

the G with D,

which is the 5th note of the G major scale, and D is followed by

A, and so on

around the octave until we get to F, which is followed by C, and

we're back to

where we started. The complete Circle of Fifths looks like this:

C

F G

Bb/A# D

Eb/D# A

Ab/G# E

Db/C# B

Gb/F#

There are two basic rules for chord changes. The first is that

short movements

along the circle sound more natural than long ones. For example,

the chord

change C major to G major is very natural, whereas the change

C major to E

minor is more awkward. The second rule is that clockwise moves

(forward) make

the song seem to be developing forwards, whereas counter-clockwise

moves

(backward) make the song be resolving. The chord changes we

gave above are

these:

E A E B E (I Saw Her Standing There). This one involves only single

step movements. Starting on E, we go back, forwards, forwards, back.

G D C G (Fortunate Son). This one starts by going forward one step,

then

jumps back two steps, then resolves by going forward one step.

D Bm Em A7 (Today). This one begins with a three-step jump forward,

but

then resolves back one step at a time.

F Dm Bb C7 (Lollipop) This one begins with a three-step jump forward,

th

en comes _four_ steps back, then two steps forward and resolves

with a gentl

e single step back.

Almost all chord movements in all songs involves jumps of 4 steps

or less

along the Circle, and most of them only 1 or 2 steps. The Circle

of Fifths is

an invaluable guide to picking up bass lines off a record. The

general steps

you can follow are these:

1. Listen to the first note and the last chord of the song. This

root note

of this chord will almost invariably be key of the song. Thus,

if the first

chord is A major, then the song is very probably in the key of A

major.

2. Listen to the song and try to figure out the sequence of chord

changes.

If you can hear each chord, great: but if you need to guess, guess

short steps

on the Circle of Fifths before you guess longer ones. eg, if the

song opens

on A major, it's very likely that the next chord is either D major

or E major,

and it's very unlikely to be F minor or D flat major.

3. Once you know the sequence of chords of the song, then start

trying to find

the individual notes of the bass line from the chords that are

being played,

and from the likely passing notes between those chords.

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