David Nimrod Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 Ok, I admit it, what I know about music theory could be written on the back of a stamp... My question is:- do these notes (in any order) constitute a scale, and if so, what is it? F, G#, C#, D#, A#, Many thanks ;-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bilbo Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 (edited) It's a variation on a simple C sharp pentatonic starting on the F but missing out the A sharp until the second octave. Or a minor sixth arpeggio with an added 11th? It would read better as flats not sharps (i.e. D flat not C sharp) but I guess typing flats is harder! Edited November 26, 2007 by bilbo230763 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mikey D Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 It's a common Db or C# major pentatonic. Db(C#), Eb(D#), F, Ab(G#), Bb(A#) 1 - 2 - 3 - 5 - 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chris_b Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 Penta what? Just looks like a simple G#major scale to me: G# A# C C# D# F G G#. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bilbo Posted November 26, 2007 Share Posted November 26, 2007 A flat - it makes more sense as an A flat major scale than G sharp. Simply put, if you think all seven note (octave) scales should have an A B C D E F G. A G sharp scale reads G sharp, A Sharp, C, C sharp, D sharp, E shap G, G sharp. So it has 2 cs and 2 Gs and would be a nightmare to read using conventional staff notation. If you make it A flat you have and A flat, B flat, C, D flat, E flat, F, G A flat. Much better in my head and on paper! Make sense? So, its a D flat pentatonic (penta = five notes including the root (tonic), hence D flat, E flat, F (major 3rd so its a major pentatonic), A flat, B flat. 5 notes = pentatonic). In fact, most pentatonics work against more than one major scale and a D flat pentatonic is equally useful against both a D flat (C sharp) scale, a G flat (F sharp) scale and an A flat (G sharp) major scale. So we are all right!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Nimrod Posted November 26, 2007 Author Share Posted November 26, 2007 [quote name='bilbo230763' post='94622' date='Nov 26 2007, 04:38 PM']So we are all right!![/quote] Phew!!! ;-) Thanks to you all... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Nimrod Posted November 26, 2007 Author Share Posted November 26, 2007 [quote name='Mikey D' post='94579' date='Nov 26 2007, 03:06 PM']It's a common Db major pentatonic.[/quote] That makes perfect sense now - thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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