Lydian augmented scale
Modes | I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII |
---|---|
Component pitches | |
C, D, E, F♯, G♯, A, B, C | |
Qualities | |
Number of pitch classes | 7 |
Forte number | 7-34 |
Complement | 5-34 |
In music, the Lydian augmented scale (Lydian ♯5 scale) is the third mode of the ascending melodic minor scale or jazz minor scale.
Starting on C, the notes would be as follows:
C - D - E - F♯ - G♯ - A - B - C
Generically the whole and half steps are:
- W - W - W - W - H - W - H -
Building on the first scale degree, the scale yields both a Major 7(♯5) chord (C-E-G♯-B) Play and a Major 7(♯11) chord (C-E-G♯-B-F♯).[1] It functions as a I+ Play . See: chord-scale system.
"This scale can be used to create a cool altered major sound."[2] "It has a polychord sound built in,"[2] created by superimposing the Cmaj and the Emaj ( Play ) and/or F♯dim ( Play ) triads that exist in the scale, this being "a very common practice for most bop and post-bop players (such as McCoy Tyner)."[3]
The scale may be thought of as a major scale with an augmented fourth and fifth, or as the relative to the melodic minor ascending scale (C Lydian augmented and A melodic minor ascending share the same notes).
See also
Sources
Further reading
- Coker, Jerry (1997). Jerry Coker's Complete Method for Improvisation, p. 36. ISBN 978-0-7692-1856-4.
- Hewitt, Michael. 2013. Musical Scales of the World. The Note Tree. ISBN 978-0957547001.