This rest of this lesson continues at: http://www.guitarworld.com/string-theory-how-compose-and-improvise-melodies-over-chord-progression
The following content is related to the February 13 issue of Guitar World. For the full range of interviews, features, tabs and more, pick up the new issue on newsstands now, or in our online store:http://store.guitarworld.com/products/guitar-world-feb-13-the-who
Welcome to String Theory, a new column dedicated to imparting guitar-centric music theory concepts in a practical, useful way that you can readily apply to composing and improvising. Rather than show you a bunch of dry, abstract textbook examples of how chords are built from and live within various scales, I will try to keep things interesting and inspiring by presenting etudes, which are entertaining mini-compositions that serve to instruct and demonstrate musical devices and/or provide a technical exercise. (Those of you who have the patience for that kind of mathematical, from-the-ground-up learning approach can find hours of it in my two instructional DVDs, Mastering Fretboard Harmony and Mastering Fretboard Harmony, Part 2, both available at the GuitarWorld.com online store.)
I'd like to start things off by showing you a traditional, surefire method of creating pleasing, satisfying melodies, using a repeating eight-bar chord progression that moves through the cycle of fifths (also known as the cycle of fourths) in the key of G major and its relative minor key, E minor, with increasingly complex melodic variations. I call it "Autumn Leaves Counterpoint" because it's based on the chord changes to the old jazz standard "Autumn Leaves" and demonstrates the use of counterpoint, which may be defined as two or more independent voices with different pitches and rhythms.