Jazz scale


{
\override Score.TimeSignature #'stencil = ##f
\relative c' {
  \clef treble
  \time 6/4 c4^\markup { "C whole tone scale" } d e fis gis ais \time 4/4 c1 \bar "||"
  \time 4/4 <c, e gis bes>1 \bar "||"
} }
One chord-scale option for an augmented dominant seventh chord (+7th) is the whole tone scale.[1]

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.[2] Some jazz scales, such as the eight-note bebop scales, add additional chromatic passing tones to the familiar seven-note diatonic scales.

  1. ^ Hatfield, Ken (2005). Jazz and the Classical Guitar Theory and Applications, p. 121. ISBN 0-7866-7236-6.
  2. ^ Tymoczko, Dmitri (1997). "The Consecutive-Semitone Constraint on Scalar Structure: A Link Between Impressionism and Jazz", Integral 11:135–79.