


On Friday, February 17th, 2012 at 12:03 am and is filed under Intermediate Lessons. Playing the jazz minor you would get C D Eb F G A B C B A G F Eb D C. So using C Major to build the Melodic Minor you would get C D Eb F G A B C B A G F E D C. To use the scale as the jazz minor, simply play the ascending version descending as well. So when you play this scale, you flatten the third of the major scale on the way up and return the third to it’s normal state on the way down, which is a much easier way of colouring a minor scale, especially for vocalists who find the full tone of the Harmonic Minor scale sometimes difficult. The first is as the ascending melodic minor scale (the jazz minor scale) and the descending melodic minor scale. Melodic Minor is a bit special as it is known in 2 ways. This scale produces a unique sound akin to a snake charmer’s tune. Using C Major you would get C D Eb F G Ab B C and in A minor you would get A B C D E F G# A to demonstrate an easy way of seeing the two. There are two ways to think of the harmonic minor first would be as a relative minor with a sharpened seventh degree, or as the major scale but with a flattened third and sixth degrees. I find it easier to think of the relative minor as the sixth degree of the major though, but you choose which one works best for you. You can apply this logic to every major scale and produce any minor scale. Now apply the changes to the major scale that produce a minor scale by flattening the third, the sixth and the seventh degrees of the scale and you get A B C D E F G A or C Major from A to A. If you think of A Major, it is A B C# D E F# G# A. I II bIII IV V bVI bVII – Relative Minor. If you play C Major from A to A, you get A relative minor. In this case though, we are interested in the 6th degree of the scale as this is the Relative Minor scale.

The second degree is the Dorian scale and is played from the 2nd degree to the 2nd degree, in the case of C major, the second degree would make D Dorian or D E F G A B C D. The root, or first degree is a major scale, C to C in the case of C major. I find it easier to not think of scales as notes but rather as degrees for instance, a major scale would be (using roman numerals): Relative minor is aptly named since it relates to a major scale. There are three basic types of minor scales: Relative Minor, Harmonic Minor and Melodic Minor.
