Monday, July 25, 2011

some scale relationships

One way to ponder and categorize scales is to organize them so that a new scale is described as an old one with one modification. For example, the melodic minor scale can be viewed as a major scale with a flat 3; the harmonic minor can be conceptualized as a melodic minor with a flat 6. The following image describes several scales this way, taking the major/ionian scale as primary:

The box for the whole-tone leading has been made a different color because it doesn't strictly involve only one change (but it is deducible by a series of changes starting from an augmented (ionian sharp-5) then to a lydian augmented).

(By the way the above image was made with Open Office Draw: a great and free program!)

The modes of these parent scales haven't been included, though not doing so is to a certain extent a taxonomic bias. For instance I had at first included the scale/mode ionian #2, as it's only one deviation from the major scale. But upon reflection it turns out that it is a mode of the neapolitan minor, a scale which is already quite well known. Consequently I decided against the inclusion of the ionian #2, though an interesting and extremely complex chart could be generated by including such modes and showing their relationship(s) to other scales.

A chart like this also tells use at a fairly quick glance just how far scales are from one another. For instance the doulbe harmonic scale is just one note different or one "scale away" from the harmonic major; the neapolitan minor is three scales away from the major/ionian.

Of course there are a myriad scales out there, but this beginning should at least get the mind working with a view towards simplifying that array -- "well begun is half done", after all.

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