A Lydian Mode
Dreamy, floating major mode with raised 4th
What is the A Lydian Mode?
Lydian is the fourth mode of the major scale — the major scale started from its 4th degree. Compared to the major scale, Lydian raises the 4th by a half step (#4 / b5). The raised 4th creates a floating, suspended quality that never quite settles — every melody feels slightly weightless. Lydian is the bright cousin of major: still happy, but more open and dreamy.
Notes in the scale: A – B – C# – D# – E – F# – G#
Intervals: Root, 2, 3, b5, 5, 6, 7 (measured from the root)
Parent key: E major — shares the same seven notes
Progressions where the A Lydian Mode fits
IVmaj7 vamp — in A Lydian
Amaj7
I-II (Lydian) — in A Lydian
A → B
When to use the A Lydian Mode
A Lydian Mode draws its notes from E major, starting on A. Use Lydian over a static major 7 chord, especially a IVmaj7 — that #4 over the IV becomes the natural 7 of the parent key, sounding consonant and lifted. Joe Satriani built a career on Lydian (the title track of 'Flying in a Blue Dream'), film composers like John Williams use it constantly ('Yoda's Theme'), and any jazz-fusion solo over a IVmaj7 vamp leans on it.
Blues Improvisation
Master blues soloing
Practice with Improvisio
See how the A Lydian Mode works over chord progressions.
Try it in the trainer