I was planning to talk about “Dreams” by Fleetwood Mac in class when we discuss modal harmony. Music theory teachers like to bring this tune up as an example of Lydian mode, but I don’t hear it as being in F Lydian. It’s also not clearly in C major, or A minor, or really any specific key or mode at all! That’s an extraordinary level of ambiguity for a song whose melody only uses five different notes (plus a sixth note that only appears once) over a grand total of two chords (plus a third chord that only appears once.)
I was looking for ways to illustrate this harmonic ambiguity, and thought it would be fun for everyone if I took the vocal stem and put different chords and progressions under it. So here’s a series of reharmonizations: a jazzy one in A major, then simpler ones in C major, D Dorian, A minor, C blues, A blues, D blues, and F major.
Continue reading “What I learned from remixing “Dreams” over and over”

