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- Jazz_scale abstract "A jazz scale is any musical scale used in jazz. Many "jazz scales" are common scales drawn from Western European classical music, including the diatonic, whole-tone, octatonic (or diminished), and the modes of the ascending melodic minor. All of these scales were commonly used by late nineteenth and early twentieth-century composers such as Rimsky-Korsakov, Debussy, Ravel and Stravinsky, often in ways that directly anticipate jazz practice. Some jazz scales, such as the bebop scales, add additional chromatic passing tones to the familiar diatonic scales.One important feature of jazz is what theorists call "the principles of chord-scale compatibility": the idea that a sequence of chords will generate a sequence of compatible scales. In classical major-mode harmony, chords typically belong to the same scale. (For example, a I-ii-V-I progression in C major will typically use only the notes of the C diatonic collection.) In jazz, a four-chord progression may use four different scales, often as the result of chordal alterations. For instance, in C major, a jazz musician may alter the V chord G-B-D-F with a flattened fifth, producing G-B-D♭-F. An improviser might then choose a scale containing these four notes, such as G whole tone (G-A-B-C♯-D♯-F), G octatonic [or symmetric diminished] (G-A♭-B♭-B-C♯-D-E-F), or a mode of either D or A♭ melodic minor ascending (G-A-B-C♯-D-E-F or G-A♭-B♭-C♭-D♭-E♭-F respectively). In each case the scale contains the chord tones G-B-D♭-F and is said to be compatible with it. This notion of "chord scale compatibility" marks a fundamental difference between jazz harmony and traditional classical practice.An avoid note is a note in a jazz scale that is considered, in jazz theory and practice, too dissonant to be played against the underlying chord, and so is either avoided or chromatically altered. For example, in major-key harmony the fourth, and thus 11th, is an avoid note and thus either treated as a passing tone or augmented (raised a semitone). Avoid notes are often a minor second (or a minor ninth) above a chord tone or a perfect fourth above the root of the chord.[One] can get a good sense of the difference between classical and non-classical harmony from looking at how they deal with dissonances. Classical treats all notes that don't belong to the chord (i.e., the triad) as potential dissonances to be resolved. ... Non-classical harmony just tells you which note in the scale to avoid ["what is sometimes called an avoid-note"] (because it's really dissonant), meaning that all the others are okay.".
- Jazz_scale thumbnail Whole_tone_scale_on_C.png?width=300.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink books?id=RiYPAAAACAAJ.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink jazz-guitar-scales.html.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink merchant.mvc?Screen=SRCH&Search=David%20Liebman.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink www.jazzscalesuggester.com.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink books.htm.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageExternalLink music_scales.html.
- Jazz_scale wikiPageID "185739".
- Jazz_scale wikiPageRevisionID "601135027".
- Jazz_scale hasPhotoCollection Jazz_scale.
- Jazz_scale subject Category:Jazz_techniques.
- Jazz_scale subject Category:Musical_scales.
- Jazz_scale type Ability105616246.
- Jazz_scale type Abstraction100002137.
- Jazz_scale type Cognition100023271.
- Jazz_scale type Communication100033020.
- Jazz_scale type JazzTechniques.
- Jazz_scale type Know-how105616786.
- Jazz_scale type Method105660268.
- Jazz_scale type MusicalNotation106814870.
- Jazz_scale type MusicalScales.
- Jazz_scale type Notation106808493.
- Jazz_scale type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Jazz_scale type Scale106856568.
- Jazz_scale type Technique105665146.
- Jazz_scale type Writing106359877.
- Jazz_scale type WrittenCommunication106349220.
- Jazz_scale comment "A jazz scale is any musical scale used in jazz. Many "jazz scales" are common scales drawn from Western European classical music, including the diatonic, whole-tone, octatonic (or diminished), and the modes of the ascending melodic minor. All of these scales were commonly used by late nineteenth and early twentieth-century composers such as Rimsky-Korsakov, Debussy, Ravel and Stravinsky, often in ways that directly anticipate jazz practice.".
- Jazz_scale label "Bluestonleiter".
- Jazz_scale label "Escala de blues".
- Jazz_scale label "Jazz scale".
- Jazz_scale label "Scala blues".
- Jazz_scale label "Skala bluesowa".
- Jazz_scale label "アヴェイラブル・ノート・スケール".
- Jazz_scale label "爵士音阶".
- Jazz_scale sameAs Bluesová_stupnice.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Bluestonleiter.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Escala_de_blues.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Scala_blues.
- Jazz_scale sameAs アヴェイラブル・ノート・スケール.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Skala_bluesowa.
- Jazz_scale sameAs m.019d06.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Q304144.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Q304144.
- Jazz_scale sameAs Jazz_scale.
- Jazz_scale wasDerivedFrom Jazz_scale?oldid=601135027.
- Jazz_scale depiction Whole_tone_scale_on_C.png.
- Jazz_scale isPrimaryTopicOf Jazz_scale.