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minor scale

 
Dictionary: minor scale
minor scale
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minor scale

n. Music
A diatonic scale having a half step between the second and third degrees and any of several intervalic arrangements above the fifth.


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A secondary key used to identify a record. For example, if transactions are sorted by account number and date, account number is the major key and date is the minor key.

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WordNet: minor scale
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a diatonic scale with notes separated by whole tones except for the 2nd and 3rd and 5th and 6th
  Synonym: minor diatonic scale


Wikipedia: Minor scale
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Minor scale
Qualities
# of pitch classes: 7
Maximal evenness
Natural minor Scales

A minor scale in music theory is a diatonic scale with a third scale degree at an interval of a minor third above the tonic. While this definition encompasses modes with the minor third, such as Dorian mode, the term may more usually refer only to the natural minor, harmonic minor, and melodic minor scales, described below, which are in most common use in western classical music (see major and minor). The natural minor scale is the same as the 6th (or Aeolian) mode of the major scale. For example, the white notes of a keyboard give a major scale from C to C. If the notes are played beginning from the sixth step of that scale, which is A, then a natural minor scale (the "relative minor" of C) is heard.

Contents

Natural minor

Natural Minor scale: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8.

One may therefore remember the steps in the natural minor scale - "W,H,W,W,H,W,W," (in semitones - 2 1 2 2 1 2 2) - as just the familiar major scale steps with a different starting point. C major is C D E F G A B C; the A natural minor scale is A B C D E F G A. If the scale is used with the correct corresponding key signature, the natural minor scale needs no accidentals.

Natural minor scale full octave ascending on a Amoll.mid Play

The natural minor scale is the same as the Aeolian mode, but music in the minor scale in the common practice period of Western music usually uses a leading tone a semitone below the tonic: the chord built on the dominant (fifth scale degree) is almost always a major triad, at least at cadence points; consequently the seventh degree of the scale must be raised with an accidental. Hence music using the "natural" seventh degree, called the subtonic, sounds ancient, folkloric or modal to Western ears.[citation needed]

Harmonic and melodic minor

The above considerations of chordal harmony led to the harmonic minor scale, the same as the natural minor but with a chromatically raised seventh degree.

Harmonic Minor Scale: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

For example, in the key of A minor, the harmonic minor scale is:

A B C D E F G A'

A harmonic minor Amoll harm.mid Play

The harmonic minor is also occasionally referred to as the Mohammedan scale[1] as its upper tetrachord corresponds to the Hijaz ajna, commonly found in Middle Eastern music. (The harmonic minor scale as a whole is described as Nahawand-Hijaz in Middle Eastern parlance.)

The interval between the sixth and seventh degrees of this scale (in this case F and G) is an augmented second. While some composers, notably Mozart, have used this interval to advantage in melodic composition, other composers, having felt it to be an awkward leap, particularly in vocal music, considered a whole step between these two scale degrees more conducive to smooth melody writing, so either the subtonic seventh was used or the sixth scale degree raised. Traditionally, music theorists have called these two options the ascending melodic (also known as heptatonia seconda) and descending melodic minor scales, the ascending being identical in its upper tetrachord to the major scale, and the descending being simply the natural minor:

A B C D E F G A' and then

A' G F E D C B A respectively.

A melodic minor ascending Amoll melod auf.mid Play

A melodic minor descending Amoll melod ab.mid Play

Composers have not been consistent in using these in ascending and descending melodies. Just as often, composers choose one form or the other based on whether one of the two notes is part of the most recent chord (the prevailing harmony). Particularly, to use the triad of the relative major – which is very common – since this is based on the third degree of the minor scale, the raised seventh degree would cause an augmented triad; composers thus frequently require the lowered seventh degree, that which is found in the natural minor. In jazz, the descending aeolian is disregarded altogether.

Finding key signatures

Circle of fifths showing major and minor keys and their signatures

Major and minor keys which share the same signature are called relative; so C major is the relative major of A minor, and C minor is the relative minor of E major. The relative major is a minor third above the tonic of the minor. For example, since the key signature of G major has one sharp (see major scales for how to find this), its relative minor, E minor, also has one sharp in its key signature.

Music may be written in an enharmonic scale (e.g. C minor, which only has four sharps in its key signature, compared to the theoretical eight flats required for D minor). The following are enharmonic equivalents:

Key Sig. Major Scale Minor Scale
5/7 B/C major g/a minor
6/6 F/G major d/e minor
7/5 C/D major a/b minor

Double sharps/double flats can be written as accidentals, but not as part of a key signature. For example:

D Minor Key Signature: E + A + D + G + C + F + Bdouble flat (the B is now double flatted and therefore, notated after the single accidentals, which obviously do not include the B)

D Natural Minor = D E F G A Bdouble flat C D

D Melodic Minor (Ascending + Descending) = D E F G A B C D C Bdouble flat A G F E D

D Harmonic Minor = D E F G A Bdouble flat C D

See also

References

  • Gjerdingen, Robert O. (1990). "A Guide to the Terminology of German Harmony", Studies in the Origin of Harmonic Tonality by Dahlhaus, Carl, trans. Gjerdingen (1990).

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