Heptatonic scale

A heptatonic scale is a musical scale that has seven pitches per octave. Examples include the major scale (or minor scale), (e.g., in C major: C D E F G A B C—and in the relative minor, A minor: A B C D E F G); the melodic minor scale, C D E F G A B C ascending, C B A G F E D C descending; the harmonic minor scale, C D E F G A B C; and a scale variously known as the Roman Byzantine, and Hungarian,[1] scale, C D E F G A B C. Indian Classical theory postulates seventy-two seven-tone scale types, whereas others postulate twelve or ten (depending on the theorist) seven-tone scale types collectively called thaat.

Several heptatonic scales in Western, Roman, Spanish, Hungarian, and Greek music can be analyzed as juxtapositions of tetrachords.[2] All heptatonic scales have all intervals present in their interval vector analysis,[3] and thus all heptatonic scales are both hemitonic and tritonic. There is a special affinity for heptatonic scales in the Western key signature system.

Diatonic scale

Any seven-note scale constructed sequentially using only whole tones and half tones, repeating at the octave, having a tonal center, and comprising only one tritone interval between any two scale members, which ensures that the half tone intervals are as far apart as possible. In Western music, there are seven such scales, and they are commonly known as the modes of the major scale (Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, and Locrian). However, in Indian Classical music, a theoretical maximum of 72 heptatonic scales are possible though fewer are actually used.

Melodic minor scale

Melodic minor scale (ascending) on A  Play 

In traditional classical theory, the melodic minor scale has two forms, as noted above, an ascending form and a descending form. Although each of these forms of itself comprises seven pitches, together they comprise nine, which might seem to call into question the scale's status as a heptatonic scale. In certain twentieth-century music, however, it became common systematically to use the ascending form for both ascending and descending passages. Such a use has been notably ascribed to the works of Béla Bartók and to bop and post-bop jazz practice. The traditional descending form of the melodic minor scale is equivalent to the natural minor scale in both pitch collection (which is diatonic) and tonal center.

Harmonic minor scale

Harmonic minor scale on A  Play 

The harmonic minor scale is so called because in tonal music of the common practice period (from approximately 1600 to approximately 1900) chords or harmonies are derived from it more than from the natural minor scale or the melodic minor scale. The augmented second between its sixth degree and its raised seventh degree (the "leading tone"), traditionally considered undesirable in melodic progression, is avoided by placing these pitches in different voices in adjacent chords, as in this progression: F A D, F G B, F A C (ii°b–V7d–iv in C minor). The A in the middle voice does not ascend to B, and the B in the upper voice does not descend to A.

Heptatonia prima and secunda

The names heptatonia prima and heptatonia secunda apply to various seven-note scales that can be formed using tones and semitones, but without two semi-tones in succession. (Some are more theoretical.) They are:

Heptatonia prima

Beginning on keynote A and working up the notes of the 'natural minor' scale (A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A), the seven modes are:

Aeolian mode C  Play 
Locrian mode C  Play 
Ionian mode C  Play 
Dorian mode C  Play 
Phrygian mode C  Play 
Lydian mode C  Play 
Mixolydian mode C.  Play 

The Dorian is exactly the same descending as ascending. The less common series is

Heptatonia secunda

The difference between this and the diatonic modes is that they have two and three tones between each semitone, while these latter modes have one and four. These are sometimes called modes of the melodic ascending minor since that is the most commonly used scale of this type, but other modes can be produced by starting on the different scale notes in turn. Thus starting on keynote A as above and following the notes of the ascending melodic minor (A, B, C, D, E, F, G) yields these seven modes:

Ascending melodic minor scale on A  Play 
Acoustic scale on C.  Play 
Half diminished scale on C  Play 
Altered scale on C  Play 

These modes are more awkward to use than those of the diatonic scales due to the four tones in a row yielding augmented intervals on one hand while the one tone between two semitones gives rise to diminished intervals on the other. For example, the last two modes listed above both have 'Locrian' diminished triads built on their tonics, giving them unstable tonality, while the third mode not only has an augmented fourth a la the Lydian mode but also an augmented fifth making the dominant and subdominant unusable.

Heptatonia tertia

The last group of seven-note tone/semitone scales is heptatonia tertia, and consists of scales with two adjacent semitones—which amounts to a whole-tone scale, but with an additional note somewhere in its sequence, e.g., B C D E F G A.

Other heptatonic scales

Hungarian Gypsy scale

If the interval of the augmented second is used, many other scales become possible. These include Gypsy I-II-III-IV-V-VI-VII Hungarian I-II-III-IV-V-VI-VII The scales are symmetrical about the tonic and dominant respectively and the names are sometimes used interchangeably.

Phrygian dominant scale  Play 

Phrygian major or dominant harmonic minor I-II-III-IV-V-VI-VII This differs from the Phrygian in having a major third. It may also be considered built on the dominant of the harmonic minor scale.

Enigmatic scale on C  Play 

Verdi's Scala Enigmatica I-II-III-IV-V-VI-VII i.e. G A B C D E F, which is similar to the heptonia tertia mentioned above, differing only in that the second degree here is flattened.

Melakarta

Main article: Melakarta

Melakarta is a South Indian Classical method of organizing Raagas based on their unique heptatonic scales. The postulated number of melakarta derives from arithmetical calculation and not from Carnatic practice, which uses far fewer scale forms. Seven-pitch melakarta are considered subsets of a twelve-pitch scale roughly analogous to the Western chromatic scale. The first and fifth melakarta tones, corresponding to the first and seventh chromatic tones, are invariable in inflection, and the fourth melakarta tone, corresponding to the fifth or sixth chromatic tone, is allowed one of two inflections only, a natural (shuddah) position and a raised (tivra) position. Thus the number of possible forms is equal to twice the square of the number of ways a two-membered subset can be extracted from a four-membered set:

2\cdot\left(\frac{4!}{2!\cdot2!}\right)^2 = 2\cdot6^2= 2\cdot36 =72

Thaat

Main article: That (music)

Hindustani heptatonic theory additionally stipulates that the second, third, sixth and seventh degrees of heptatonic scale forms (septak) are also allowed only two inflections each, in this case, one natural position, and one lowered (komal) position. Arithmetically this produces 25, or thirty-two, possibilities, but Hindustani theory, in contradistinction to Carnatic theory, excludes scale forms not commonly used.

Chinese Gongche notation

Gongche notation heptatonic scale gives a do, re, mi ,[between fa and fa], sol, la ,[between ti and ti] heptatonic scale.

See also

References

  1. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London, 2001)
  2. Dupré, Marcel (1962). Cours Complet d'Improvisation a l'Orgue, v.2, p. 35, trans. John Fenstermaker. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. ASIN: B0006CNH8E.
  3. Hanson, Howard. (1960) Harmonic Materials of Modern Music, p. 362 ff. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. LOC 58-8138.
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