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This month, I'm going to address the seemingly simple but creatively challenging endeavor of crafting strong, cohesive melodies over a short, repeating chord progression, or vamp, as it is often called.
Specifically, I'll focus on a familiar vamp known as the "i-IV (one-four) Dorian vamp," which is found in classic rock songs as well as jazz, funk and R&B tunes. This name describes a chord movement that's based on the Dorian mode and goes from the "one minor" chord (i), or "one minor-seven" (i7), to "four major" (IV).
A famous example of a i-IV Dorian vamp is the verse accompaniment in the Pink Floyd classic "Breathe," which goes Em7 to A, one chord per bar, at a laid-back tempo. (Neil Young's "Down by the River" uses this same vamp.)