So,
back in January I laid out a practice schedule for the year that
would include me investigating and studying a variety of new ideas to
kick myself out of a rut, and included in that variety was the
harmonic minor scale, something I've long been more or less familiar
with but never really looked into. So in the spirit of self
improvement, I'm presenting my findings...
First
off, what is the harmonic minor scale? It's a seven note scale built
from these intervals:
R
– 2 – b3 – 4 – 5 – b6 -7
We
can view this as a natural minor scale with a natural 7th,
and you can see the minor 3rd
gap between the b6 and 7th
gives it an eerie, “haunted house” vibe. Classical music makes
heavy use of this scale – in fact, in many classical guitar
syllabi, the harmonic minor is taught before the minor pentatonic
(you crazy classical fools!). However, popular music tends to favour
the natural minor, which is in itself a mode of the major scale.
(The
difference between a scale and a mode? The modes of the major scale
are all re-arrangements of the notes of the major scale, and as the
strongest, most straightforward tonality, the major scale is defined
as the parent scale. With the harmonic minor, there is no way to
rearrange the major scale notes to form the intervals of the harmonic
minor, and it is the strongest and most straightforward of it's
tonalities.. the modes of the harmonic minor are wondrous and
obscure!)
Let's
look at the A Harmonic Minor scale (it's the simplest to wrap your
head around):
R
– 2 – b3 – 4 – 5 – b6 -7
A
- B - C - D – E – F – G#
Now,
if we look at this modally, this is what we get:
A
- B - C - D – E – F – G# - A Harmonic Minor
R
– b2 – b3 – 4 – b5 – 6 - b7
B
- C - D - E – F – G# – A - B Locrian #6
R
– 2 – 3 – 4 – #5 – 6 -7
C
- D - E - F – G# – A – B - C Ionian Augmented
R
– 2 – b3 – #4 – 5 – 6 - b7
D
- E - F - G# – A – B – C - D Dorian #4 (aka Romanian)
R
– b2 – 3 – 4 – 5 – b6 -b7
E
- F - G# - A – B – C – D - E Phrygian Dominant
R
– #2 – 3 – #4 – 5 – 6 - b7
F
- G# - A - B – C – D – E - F Lydian #2
R
– b2 – b3 – b4 – b5 – b6 -bb7
G#
- A - B - C – D – E – F - G# Ultralocrian
It's
also worth taking a look at the results when you harmonise this
scale:
i
chord – A- C – E : Am
ii
chord – B – D – F : B diminished
III
chord – C – E – G# : C augmented
iv
chord – D – F – A : D minor
V
chord – E – G# - B : E
VI
chord – F – A – C : F
vii
chord – G# - B – D : G# diminished
This
means that when you look at a simple 12 bar, you end up with :
//
Am / % / % / % / % / Dm / % /
Am
/ % / E / Dm / Am / E //
I-V-vi-IV
gets even more interesting: Am – E – Dm – F
Jazzers
may be in for a shock – take a look at the ii-V-I.. Bdim – E –
Am.
And then we can extend past triads to 7ths:
i chord – A- C – E - G# : Ammaj7
ii chord – B – D – F - A : Bm7b5
III chord – C – E – G# - B : Cmaj7#5
iv chord – D – F – A - C: D m7
V chord – E – G# - B - D: E7
VI chord – F – A – C - E: Fmaj7
vii chord – G# - B – D - F : G# diminished7
Interestingly
though, these chord sequences still have a (somewhat twisted)
coherency and charm about them, and this is an excellent resource for
players looking to write something new and different but not sure how
to break out of a rut – tackling standard chord sequences in
alternate tonalities is a great place to start.
Mapping
out the modes using the three octave box/ transition technique
covered in Progressive Guitar Training is a terrific exercise for
both fingers and brain, and then there's improvisation... and once
you've figured out how to be melodic with the Ultralocrian then...
the sky is the limit!
Next
month – a tribute to a lost legend, the incredible Allan
Holdsworth. For those of you who aren't familiar, do yourselves a
favour and YouTube him- and then see how long it takes you to pick
your jaw off the floor!
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