Description
Description
The Melodic Minor #5 Scale Class Content | Juampy Juarez
Juampy explores a scale that few will be readily familiar with, despite its prevalence in jazz and classical music. This scale is the seven-note Melodic minor #5.
The sound of the scale is diminished – dark and tense sound with a hint of an eastern flavour. He shows how this can be used in both blues and jazz settings.
The seven-note C Melodic minor #5 is spelled C,D,Eb,F, G#,A,B
This scale is a subset from the eight-note Diminished scale:
i.e., The C Diminished would be spelled: C.D,Eb,F,F#,G#.A,B.
So the Melodic minor omits the sharped 5th note contained in the eight note Diminished scale.
(It is identical to the 8-note C Diminished scale without the F# / #4th.)
This scale creates new chords that were used a lot by the expressionist composers, like Richard Strauss, Wagner.
Jazz composers such as Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock employed this scale.
Many may be familiar with it from the compositions of Alan Holdsworth.
Juampy offers many single-line and chordal exercises to get familiar with this, cycling through the modes for familiarity with the different offspring.
Juampy explores:
- Application of different chord qualities.
This where he goes in depth, playing over different tonalities – minor , major 7, dominant and half-diminished sounds. - Blues:
He then applies this information with playing over major and minor blues progressions. - Jazz:
Going even further, he shows you how to apply this information to standards, in particular 2-5-1 applications. - Quartal harmony:
Of compositional interest is his section on quartile and cluster sounds, where he applies the Melodic minor #5 to quartile harmonies.
One of the most satisfying courses on a type of harmony that you will find very little information elsewhere in either books or on the internet.
Congratulations to the depth of research and practical examples on this course to Mr. Juarez.
Course Description by Mike Bryant
Full Video + Download | |||
Melodic Minor #5 Scale Full Class + Download | 01:07:43 | ||
WHAT IS THIS THING CALLED THE MELODIC MINOR #5 SCALE? | |||
Intro Performance | 00:01:28 | ||
Introducing the Melodic Minor #5 Scale | 00:01:25 | ||
Mode 1 – C Ionian b3#5 | 00:01:43 | ||
Mode 2 – D Phrygian #4nat6 | 00:01:45 | ||
Mode 3 – Eb Lyd Augmented #3 | 00:05:51 | ||
Mode 4 – F Mixolydian #2#4 (The Magic Mode) | 00:03:55 | ||
Mode 5 – G# Altered bb6bb7 | 00:05:17 | ||
Mode 6 – A Aeolian b5nat7 | 00:05:22 | ||
Mode 7 – B Altered nat6 | 00:04:03 | ||
APPLICATION ON DIFFERENT CHORD QUALITIES | |||
Modes over Minor Sound | 00:03:17 | ||
Modes over Major7 Sound | 00:02:17 | ||
Modes over Dominant Sound | 00:02:09 | ||
Modes over Half Diminished Sound | 00:04:17 | ||
NEW SOUNDS ON THE BLUES | |||
New Sounds on The Major Blues – Explanation | 00:04:03 | ||
New Sounds on The Major Blues – Demonstration | 00:01:04 | ||
Minor Blues Colors | 00:03:29 | ||
APPLICATION ON JAZZ STANDARDS | |||
II-V-I Applications | 00:02:57 | ||
QUARTAL AND CLUSTER SOUNDS | |||
Quartal Sounds | 00:05:16 | ||
Quartal on Dominants – Clusters | 00:06:09 | ||
OUTRO | |||
Outro Performance | 00:02:10 |