Neapolitan scale

(Redirected from Neapolitan major)

In music, the major Neapolitan scale and the minor Neapolitan scale are two musical scales. Both scales are minor, in that they both contain a minor third above the root. The major and minor Neapolitan scales are instead differentiated by the quality of their sixth.

Neapolitan minor scale on C Play.
Neapolitan major scale on C Play.

The sequence of scale steps for the Neapolitan minor is as follows:[1][2][3][4]

1  2  3 4  5  6 7  8A  B  C  D  E  F  G A
[H, W, W, W, H, WH, H
C D E F G A B C]

And for the Neapolitan major:[1][2][3][4]

1  2  3 4  5  6  7  8A  B  C  D  E  F G A
[H, W, W, W, W, W, H
C D E F G A B C]

The scales are distinguished from the harmonic and ascending melodic minor scales by the lowered supertonic or second scale degree. This could also be known as the "Phrygian harmonic minor" or "Phrygian melodic minor." The scale therefore shares with the Phrygian mode the property of having a minor second above the tonic.

Both are accompanied well by power or minor chords.[1]

The 4th mode of the Neapolitan major, also known as the Lydian Dominant 6 scale, is an excellent choice for the 911/13 (no 5) chord. Said mode contains all the alterations plus the 5. A whole tone scale is often used but that mode tends to be minus the 5 that the Lydian Minor contains.

The 5th mode of the Neapolitan major is also known as the major Locrian scale.

Modes

edit

The scale contains the following modes: [5] [6]

ModeName of scaleDegreesNotes (on C Neap. Minor)Triad ChordsSeventh Chords
1Neapolitan Minor12345678CDEFGABCCmCmmaj7
2Lydian 612345678DEFGABCDDDmaj7 or D6 (equivalent to D7)
3Mixolydian Augmented12345678EFGABCDEE+E+7
4Romani Minor

(or Aeolian/Natural Minor 4)

12345678FGABCDEFFmFm7
5Locrian Dominant12345678GABCDEFGG♭5G7♭5
6Ionian/Major 212345678ABCDEFGAA or AmAmaj7 or Ammaj7
7Ultralocrian/Altered Diminished 312 3456 78BCDEFGAB*B♭5**B 6♭5
ModeName of scaleDegreesNotes (on C Neap. Major)Triad ChordsSeventh Chords
1Neapolitan Major12345678CDEFGABCCmCmmaj7
2Leading Whole Tone

(or Lydian Augmented 6)

12345678DEFGABCDD+D+maj7 or D+6 (equivalent to D+7)
3Lydian Augmented Dominant12345678EFGABCDEE+E+7
4Lydian Dominant ♭612345678FGABCDEFFF7
5Major Locrian12345678GABCDEFGG♭5G7♭5
6Half-Diminished 4

(or Altered Dominant 2)

12345678ABCDEFGAAο or *A♭5Aø7 or ***A7♭5
7Altered Dominant 312 345678BCDEFGAB*B♭5***B7♭5
Notes :
  • * While this triad consisted of 1, 4 (~3), and 5 notes, this is not really a normal triad since no use of 3rd-grade notes (in B : D or D/E). Instead, this triad more likely shaped as sus4 triad (although 4 is enharmonic to 3).
  • ** 7 enharmonic to 6, so the 6th chords is available instead of 7th (thus being used here).
  • *** These chords can actually be respelled as 7alt (the 75 is one of the altered dominant chords).

See also

edit

Sources

edit
  1. ^ a b c Celentano, Dave (1991). Monster Scales and Modes, p.44. Published by CentreStream. ISBN 0-931759-59-5.
  2. ^ a b Burrows, Terry (1999). How to Read Music: Reading Music Made Simple, p.90. ISBN 9780312241599.
  3. ^ a b Roth, Dana (2011). Encyclopedia of Scales and Modes for Electric Bass, p.9. ISBN 9781609749767.
  4. ^ a b Blatter, Alfred (2012). Revisiting Music Theory: A Guide to the Practice, p.87 & 89. ISBN 9781135870393.
  5. ^ "Neapolitan Scale and ITS Modes".
  6. ^ "MyMusicTheory | Neapolitan Minor scale modes".

Further reading

edit
edit