Rick Beato makes a case that's been missing from most music theory discussions: knowing the formulas isn't enough — you need to hear what makes each mode actually sound different. In this masterclass, he walks through major scale modes not as abstract patterns but as distinct emotional landscapes, focusing on where the half steps live in each one.
The Sound of Modes
Most guitarists learn modes as fingerings. Beato argues that's backwards. The real difference between modes isn't their theoretical formulas — it's which notes create those signature half-step intervals that give each mode its character.
When you're playing in Dorian, for example, you shouldn't just see a flat third and natural sixth on paper. You need to feel where the second moves to the flat third, and where the sixth resolves down to the flat seventh. Those particular movements — the half steps between two and flat three, between six and flat seven — are what make Dorian sound like itself.
Dorian: The Minor Mode
Dorian is essentially a minor mode with a natural sixth. That's the crucial detail most players miss. When Jeff Beck plays those perfect Dorian licks, he's targeting that major sixth resolving down to the flat seventh. It's not about knowing all the notes in the scale — it's about finding where those half steps create that specific emotional quality.
Beato demonstrates this by playing over a D minor chord and describing what happens when he lands on that natural six. The sound resolves beautifully into the flat seven, creating what he calls a "perfect Dorian description." The flat third gives it minor color; the natural six gives it that distinctive brightness that separates Dorian from the other modes.
Lydian: That Sharp Four
Lydian mode shifts the conversation entirely. Here, it's about the sharp four — that elevated fourth creates an almost yearning quality that doesn't exist in any other mode of the major scale. When Beato plays through C Lydian, he focuses on resolving that F sharp up to the octave, calling it "resolving that F sharp up." The half step between seven and the root also matters.
This is why players like Joe Satriani, Alan Holdsworth, and Larry Carlton use Lydian sounds in their compositions — they know exactly where those characteristic notes live and target them deliberately.
Modal Harmony vs. Tonal Harmony
Here's where most theory instruction falls short. In a major key, you're dealing with tonal harmony — a series of chords that revolve around the tonic through familiar progressions like one four five or two five one. These resolve to each other in predictable ways because every chord has a function within the circle of fifths.
Modal harmony works differently. You don't have those same resolving relationships between chords. Each mode can describe its own sound without necessarily pulling toward resolution. This creates what Beato calls "a beautiful thing" — harmonic freedom that lets you explore the character of individual modes rather than always moving toward home base.
When you're playing over a D minor chord, you can play Dorian or Aeolian — both work — but they have different flavors. Knowing which characteristic notes to target makes all the difference between sounding like you know what you're doing and actually sounding musical.
The Altered Dominant Scale
For those playing blues or rock fusion, the altered dominant scale represents one of the most powerful tools in contemporary harmony. This is the seventh mode of the melodic minor scale — sometimes called the diminished whole tone scale or the super Locrian mode.
On a seven sharp nine chord like E7 sharp nine, you can play the altered dominant scale and get that sophisticated, jazty sound. Players like John McLaughlin, Alan Holdsworth, and Pat Metheny use this constantly in fusion contexts. It's not just exotic theory — it's what gives modern music that forward-moving tension.
The scale contains both altered fifths (sharp five and flat five are the same note) and both altered ninths (flat nine and sharp nine), which is why it gets called "the altered scale." Every alteration creates forward motion toward resolution.
Modes of Different Parent Scales
Most rock and pop guitarists stick to modes of the major scale. But serious players need to know three parent scales: major, melodic minor, and harmonic minor. The modes from each create entirely different emotional palettes.
Major scale modes give you seven distinct colors — Ionian through Locrian. Melting into harmonic minor gives you altered dominants that work over jazz progressions. And the double harmonic major creates exotic sounds for players exploring beyond conventional harmony.
"The most important notes in describing a mode are really where the half steps are." — Rick Beato
Critics might note that focusing exclusively on modes of the major scale works fine for most popular music, and diving too deep into melodic minor or altered dominants risks overcomplicating what beginners actually need to play contemporary songs.
Bottom Line
Beato's strongest argument is practical: knowing fingerings isn't musical knowledge. The real insight comes from understanding which half steps create each mode's emotional signature — Dorian's natural sixth, Lydian's sharp four, the altered dominant's tensions. His vulnerability is that this masterclass assumes some prior theory knowledge; complete beginners might need more foundation before chasing altered dominants. For intermediate players ready to move beyond formulas, this approach transforms modes from abstract patterns into actual musical language.