Harmonic minor scale
The harmonic minor scale is a musical scale derived from the natural minor scale, with the minor seventh degree raised by one semitone to a major seventh, creating an augmented second between the sixth and seventh degrees.
Thus, a harmonic minor scale is represented by the following notation:
A harmonic minor scale can be built by lowering the 3rd and 6th degrees of the parallel major scale by one semitone.
Because of this construction, the 7th degree of the harmonic minor scale functions as a leading tone to the tonic because it is a semitone lower than the tonic, rather than a whole tone lower than the tonic as it is in natural minor scales. The intervals between the notes of a harmonic minor scale follow the sequence below:
While it evolved primarily as a basis for chords, the harmonic minor with its augmented second is sometimes used melodically. Instances can be found in Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert. In this role, it is used while descending far more often than while ascending. A familiar example of the descending scale is heard in a Ring of bells. A ring of twelve is sometimes augmented with a 5♯ and 6♭ to make a 10 note harmonic minor scale from bell 2 to bell 11.
In popular music, examples of songs in harmonic minor include Katy B's "Easy Please Me", Bobby Brown's "My Prerogative", and Jazmine Sullivan's "Bust Your Windows". The scale also had a notable influence on heavy metal, spawning a sub-genre known as neoclassical metal, with guitarists such as Chuck Schuldiner, Yngwie Malmsteen, Ritchie Blackmore, and Randy Rhoads employing it in their music.
Harmony
The scale is called the harmonic minor scale because it is a common foundation for harmonies in minor keys. Traditionally, "the main use for harmonic minor, when improvising or creating melodies, is over the V7 chord, not for use over the i chord." For example, in the key of A minor, the dominant chord is a minor triad in the natural minor scale. But when the seventh degree is raised from G to G, the triad becomes a major triad. "In fact, it created even more tension than the major key V7. This is because the scale not only outlines the notes of E7 but also adds new tension notes like the 5 and 9 ."Chords on degrees other than V may also include the raised 7th degree, such as the diminished triad on VII itself, which has a dominant function, as well as an augmented triad on III, which is not found in any "natural" harmony. This augmented fifth chord played a part in the development of modern chromaticism.
The triads built on each scale degree follow a distinct pattern. The Roman numeral analysis is shown below.
An interesting property of the harmonic minor scale is that it contains two chords that are each generated by just one interval:
- an augmented triad, which is generated by major thirds
- a diminished seventh chord, which is generated by minor thirds
The seventh chords built on each scale degree follow a distinct pattern. The Roman numeral analysis is shown in parentheses below.
Harmonic minor contains seven types of seventh chords: a minor [major seventh chord], a half-diminished seventh chord, an augmented major seventh chord, a minor seventh chord, a dominant seventh chord, a major seventh chord, and a diminished seventh chord. Natural minor only contains four types of seventh chords: three minor seventh chords, a half-diminished seventh chord, two major seventh chords, and a dominant seventh chord.
- 1st: minor-major seventh chord
- 2nd: half diminished seventh chord
- 3rd: augmented major seventh chord
- 4th: minor seventh chord
- 5th: dominant seventh chord
- 6th: major seventh chord
- 7th: diminished seventh chord
Modes of harmonic minor scale