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Gm pentatonic scale Can someone plz tell me the notes to the gm pentatonic scale? Thank you. |
well, just as there are more than one minor scale, there are more than one minor pentatonic scale, i will give the most common first: G,Bb, C, D, F. another very common one, in jazz at least, is: G, A, Bb, D, E. i have a feeling that the one you are looking for is the first one |
1 b3 4 5 7 G Bb C D F |
Your 2nd example is 1 2 b3 5 b6, which is a different scale to the common relative minor Gm (relative minor of Bb major ) |
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you're on the right track, but not entirely correct. but you make my point for me, depending on the parent scale, pentatonic scales can vary greatly. these are just 2 (well, now 3 since you introduced a new one) of the many possibilities that exist. thats why i listed the most common one first, which some will argue is not a minor pentatonic scale at all, its just an inversion of a Bb major pentatonic. call it whatever you want, as long as it makes sense to you |
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The second example is certainly less widely used, but it would be appropriate for a pentatonic taken from a melodic minor scale* or dorian mode. *Ascending form, at least: conventionally the descending form is the natural minor (aeolian mode) so you'd probably use Eb on the way down in place of E-natural! |
Oops, sorry... Correct. |
Think of it this way. Every normal Pentatonic scale will fit exactly over a diatonic scale. The first major Pentatonic fits over the Major (Ionian) scale. It is missing the 4th and the 7th tone of the Major scale, everything else is the same. The next mode of a Pentatonic is Minor and fits over the Dorian Scale, this time it is missing the 3rd and 6th of the Dorian. The next mode is also minor and fits over the Phrygian scale, this time missing the 2nd and the 5th of the Phrygian. The mode over the Lydian is non-existant because Lydian is the 4th mode in diatonic scales and there is no 4 in the Pentatonic. The next mode fits over Mixolydian and is missing the 3rd and the 7th tone of the Mixolydian. The next mode fits over the Natural Minor (Aeolian) it is missing the 2nd and the 6th tone. See the pattern? Here is a link to the 5 modes of the Pentatonic with the diatonic names by them. http://recoveryshare.com/filechute/5...positions.html Kirk |
Of course if you wanted to, you could mix and match modes and still be in the diatonic key. Pentatonic #1 could be played over these scales: Major, Lydian, Mixolydian Pentatonic #2 could be played over these scales: Dorian, Mixolydian Pentatonic #3 could be played over these scales: Phrygian, Locrian, Aeolian Pentatonic #4 could be played over these scales: Mixolydian, Major Pentatonic #5 could be played over these scales: Aeolian, Phrygian |
I'm not being picky, but better if you ask "What are the notes for the Minor Pentatonic scale in the key of G?". Much less confusion that way. |
Or, just ask for the degrees that make up the minor pentatonic scale (1 b3, 4, 5, b7), and figure out the notes yourself. That way you can apply the same degrees to any key centre, rather than just knowing the notes in G. |
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I love it when theory questions are asked... I learn so much... There are always new ways of looking at how it all fits (or doesn't fit) together... |
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i think the way the origional poster asked was just fine and very specific, not ambigious like your way: what is the G minor pentatonic scale (gm= g minor, this is common)? very specific. another way he could have asked is what is a minor pentatonic scale built off of the root note G? but in G, there certainly is no g minor pentatonic. |
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edit: it is commonly accepted that if we see a chord symbol G, then that is a G major triad, if we see g, that is a g minor triad. simillarly, GM means major, and gm means minor. this is just one system, and i personally dont use that system because of the confusion that it creates, i have however played with many composers who do use it, so you need to know it. i personally use G maj, or g min. or i use the little triangle for major and a minus sign for minor. im a huge fan of keeping it simple so my music can be played without confusion |
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