A minor, it is the same as C major.
The key signature for the harmonic minor scale changes depending on what key you are playing the scale in. For example, if you were to play a C harmonic minor you would play C minor (Bb, Eb, Ab) but sharp the seventh of the note (in this case, the Bb to B natural). This is just adding the leading tone into the scale. So, just to recap, play the minor version of the scale but add a sharped 7th. Now you have a harmonic minor.
There is no B minor 7 scale. B minor 7 is only a chord. If you still want to know what play over a Bm7 chord then i suggest you play one of the following scales: B minor, B minor pentatonic, B Dorian
Use either the minor pentatonic scale (don't use the b5/#4) or play a dominant scale over the key signature (which is like a major scale with a b7). If it's a minor funk chart then use either the minor penatonic scale or the dorian minor, which is like natural minor with a #6 (or a major scale with a b3 and b7)
This video will instruct you...http://www.5min.com/Video/How-to-Play-PianoD-Minor-and-Dorian-Scale-2459351
yes...but technically you would want to use the chord that went with the scale
A melodic minor scale is a minor scale where the sixth and seventh are raised by a half step as the scale ascends; however, the melodic minor scale is played exactly the same as a natural minor scale as it descends.
The key signature is the same, but in the D minor scale, the notes that you play may not necessarily depend only on the key signatures. It will also depend on whether you are playing the melodic or harmonic minor scale. For your information:Harmonic Scale:Ascending and Descending: Raise 7th noteMelodic Scale:Ascending: Raise 6th and 7th noteDescending: Play the scale according to the original key signatures
concert g minor b, c#, d, e, f#, g, a, b
Simply a minor scale
The difference between a melodic minor scale and a harmonic minor scale is that in a melodic minor scale, the sixth and seventh scale degrees are raised on the way up, and on the way down they are the same as they would be in natural minor. In a harmonic minor scale, only the seventh scale degree is raised and stays the same on the way down.
There are a few types of scales for EACH key: major natural minor harmonic minor melodic minor The major is the one that you typically learn first, natural minor next, etc. The harmonic minor scale is a scale that is similar to the natural minor, only the 7th tone is raised by a half step. For the melodic, it is similar to the harmonic only its 6th tone is ALSO raised. NOTE: when you are coming down on a melodic scale, play the natural minor scale for that key. There are as many of each type of scale as there are scales, which, in total is 48. Including all of the 4 types listed above.
C is the third note of an A minor scale.