You have described a Whole Tone Scale.
The term modal refers to modes of a scale. In modern music, the concept is used most commonly in jazz improvisation, with different modes being used with different types of chords. In medieval times, the different modes were used for entire songs - especially in the chants used in religious services.A scale is made up of a series of notes, with varying space between the pitches. The modern major scale is made up of seven notes, with whole step and half step intervals between the notes of the scale. For purposes of illustration, I'll use the C major scale since it has no sharps or flats to confuse the issue.The sequence of notes and intervals in a C major scale is: C, whole step, D, whole step, E, half step, F, whole step, G, whole step, A, whole step, B, and a half step back to C. The half steps are between the third and forth note and between the seventh note and the octave.Particular notes are more important in a given scale. The first and fifth notes (C and G in the C scale) are particularly important. They (and some other notes) are used in special ways, including being used as the pitches on which chords are built.Think about what would happen if we used the same notes as in a C scale, but started on D. The D and A are now the first and fifth notes.If we used them in the same way as we normally use the first and fifth notes, the music would sound quite different, because the whole and half steps would fall in different places in the scale and in the chords we use. That's a different mode of the scale.There are seven different modes that correspond to starting the scale on each of the seven notes in the scale. Because the modes were used in the catholic church, which used Latin as its language, each mode has a Latin name.Ionian is the mode starting on the first note of the major scale, so the Ionian mode is the major scale.Dorian mode starts on the second note of the major scale. It's used in jazz over minor chords.Phrygian mode starts on the third note;Lydian mode starts on the fourth note, and there's an entire branch of jazz based on this mode;Mixolydian starts on the fifth note and is used over dominant 7 chords in jazz;Aolian mode starts on the sixth note and is the modern natural minor scale; andLocrian mode starts on the seventh note.I know this may seem pretty complicated, but in fact, this has been a very simplified explanation of a very complicated topic.
A whole note :) Hope this helped!
Key can refer to any of the individual levers on a keyboard that is pressed to produce a tone. It can refer to parts of other instruments pressed down for the same reason. Key can also refer to the most general description of the tonality of a piece of music. In most western musics, a piece will be written in a particular 'key', as in A flat major or E minor. This means that the harmonic movement in the piece brings it to a final resolution with, respectively, an A flat major chord or an E minor chord. Some pieces will have complicated harmonies and will move from key to key before finally resolving.
One. A semibreve is a Whole Note. However, there are two (2) half notes in a whole note, and there are four (4) quarter notes, and eight (8) eighth notes, as well as sixteen (16) sixteenth notes. You get the picture.
That's it. His whole name is William Shakespeare. It's spelled a bunch of different ways too.
One difference between a whole tone scale and a pentatonic scale is that a whole tone scale has 6 notes per octave while a pentatonic scale has 5 notes per octave. Another major difference is that a whole tone scale has all adjacent notes a whole step apart, while a pentatonic scale does not consist entirely of whole steps, and since a pentatonic scale is only defined as a scale with 5 notes per octave, there are many pentatonic scales that are possible.
There are two different gaps between notes in a scale called whole steps and half steps. If you are playing a major scale, you will play 12345678 Where 1 is the root note, 8 is the octave, and there are half steps between 3 and 4, as well as 7 and 8
It's called a whole-tone scale. An example is C D E F# G# A# C.
You can start the whole tone scale on any note. Say you start on C, then it would be C, D, E, F#, G#, A#, C Those are six different notes that compose one whole tone scale. If you start on C#, then it would be C#, D#, F, G, A, B Those are the other six notes that make up the other whole tone scale. You can start a whole tone scale on any note.
It depends on the scale in question: * The diatonic scale (seven notes) * The melodic and harmonic minor scales (seven notes) * The chromatic scale (twelve notes) * The whole tone scale (six notes) * The pentatonic scale (five notes) * The octatonic or diminished scales (eight notes) Then of course there are the Indian Swara scales which have varying numbers of notes too.
The major scale is made of whole and half steps. WWHWWWH
It is a scale made up exclusively of whole steps, as distinct from the standard western diatonic scale that is built upon the structure whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half. For example, starting at E flat, the notes of a whole tone scale would be E flat, F, G, A, B, D flat.
One whole step.
The Diatonic scale (most commonly knows as the Major Scale) has 7 unique pitches. For example: C D E F G A B would be considered the notes of the C Major scale. Although traditionally the C would repeat again on top, it is to a NEW note, but simply the repeating of the first (root) note. The chromatic scale contains 12 notes, and it is most easily explained as every note on the piano within an Octave. C C# D D# E F F# G G# A A# B The Diminished Scale contains 8 notes Example: C C# D# E F# G A Bb And the Whole Tone Scale contains 6 notes Example: C D E F# G# A#
The whole tone scale only uses full tones, therefore there are six notes per octave. Theoretically could can start a whole tone scale on any note but there are only 2 distinct scales. Whole tone scale starting on C: C, D, E, Gb, Ab, Bb, C Whole tone scale starting on Db: Db, Eb, F, G, A, B, Db Starting a whole tone scale on any of the other notes would merely be inversions of the scales mentioned above.
The term modal refers to modes of a scale. In modern music, the concept is used most commonly in jazz improvisation, with different modes being used with different types of chords. In medieval times, the different modes were used for entire songs - especially in the chants used in religious services.A scale is made up of a series of notes, with varying space between the pitches. The modern major scale is made up of seven notes, with whole step and half step intervals between the notes of the scale. For purposes of illustration, I'll use the C major scale since it has no sharps or flats to confuse the issue.The sequence of notes and intervals in a C major scale is: C, whole step, D, whole step, E, half step, F, whole step, G, whole step, A, whole step, B, and a half step back to C. The half steps are between the third and forth note and between the seventh note and the octave.Particular notes are more important in a given scale. The first and fifth notes (C and G in the C scale) are particularly important. They (and some other notes) are used in special ways, including being used as the pitches on which chords are built.Think about what would happen if we used the same notes as in a C scale, but started on D. The D and A are now the first and fifth notes.If we used them in the same way as we normally use the first and fifth notes, the music would sound quite different, because the whole and half steps would fall in different places in the scale and in the chords we use. That's a different mode of the scale.There are seven different modes that correspond to starting the scale on each of the seven notes in the scale. Because the modes were used in the catholic church, which used Latin as its language, each mode has a Latin name.Ionian is the mode starting on the first note of the major scale, so the Ionian mode is the major scale.Dorian mode starts on the second note of the major scale. It's used in jazz over minor chords.Phrygian mode starts on the third note;Lydian mode starts on the fourth note, and there's an entire branch of jazz based on this mode;Mixolydian starts on the fifth note and is used over dominant 7 chords in jazz;Aolian mode starts on the sixth note and is the modern natural minor scale; andLocrian mode starts on the seventh note.I know this may seem pretty complicated, but in fact, this has been a very simplified explanation of a very complicated topic.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean by how many steps but I can explain a whole tone scale for you. A whole tone scale is comprised of all whole steps. For example: A B C# D# F G A or Bb C D E F# G# A# (which is Bb) So I guess there are 7 notes in the whole tone scale if that was what you were looking for.