For improvising over a blues progression, you can use the minor pentatonic scale.
Yes.
The pentatonic scale.
The different modes of the pentatonic scale are the major pentatonic scale and the minor pentatonic scale. Each mode has a unique pattern of whole and half steps that create a distinct musical sound.
The notes of the A minor pentatonic scale are A, C, D, E, and G.
An anhemitonic pentatonic scale is a pentatonic scale which contains no semitonal steps.
For improvising over a blues progression, you can use the minor pentatonic scale.
a scale that is diatonic and pentatonic
Yes.
Debussy makes use of the pentatonic scale in the first movement (entitled Pagodes) of his piano solo Estampes(composed in 1903).
The pentatonic scale.
The different modes of the pentatonic scale are the major pentatonic scale and the minor pentatonic scale. Each mode has a unique pattern of whole and half steps that create a distinct musical sound.
That is a misconception. Just as you can have a major scale that starts on any of the 12 tones, you can have pentatonic scales starting on any tone as well. It is the spacing and the number of notes that make a scale pentatonic. Incidentally, you can have a pentatonic melody with standard (non-pentatonic) harmonies accompanying it.
Yes, it does! No, a pentatonic scale has five notes.
E minor pentatonic scale
The notes of the A minor pentatonic scale are A, C, D, E, and G.
A pentatonic scale is a musical scale with five notes per octave.