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I'm studying scales and came across the natural, harmonic, and melodic minors. I understand the patterns for each scale but what other important differences exist between the three?

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  • I'm going to keep this question open for a little bit more time in anticipation for any other answers.
    – thank_you
    Commented Feb 26, 2013 at 4:58
  • 1
    This question has been answered several times already here, I'm sure.
    – Tim
    Commented Nov 3, 2013 at 12:02
  • 2
    Think of the names. Harmonic minor -- useful for harmony perhaps? Melodic minor -- hmm, perhaps for melody? And what is the natural minor? :) Commented Nov 3, 2013 at 15:27

5 Answers 5

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There are at least some differences in how they're used:

  • Natural minor is a kind of default.

  • In the common practice era a dominant chord usually contains the leading note, which is a semitone below the tonic, because that note has a strong tendency to resolve to the tonic. So, from the harmony point of view, the 7th degree of the natural minor scale should be raised in these cases, and you get the harmonic minor scale. Using a "flat" leading note makes the music sound modal, and was used both before and after the common practice era (probably also during it in folk music and such).

  • Raising only the 7th degree causes the scale to have an augmented second between the 6th and 7th degrees. This is a difficult interval to sing and also sounds like a jump, unlike the other intervals in the scale. So, from the melodic point of view, if you need the raised 7th and want to go up melodically, you also raise the 6th degree to make things more fluid.

  • Since the raised 7th degree is a leading note you usually go melodically upwards when using it. If you're going downwards you're probably not in a dominant harmony and thus you use the natural minor. Another reason for using the natural minor when going downwards is that if you take the upwards melodic minor and play that downwards it'll only start sounding like a minor after the fifth note or so.

In short, you start with the natural minor scale. You use the harmonic minor scale when you need a dominant chord, and modify it to be the melodic minor if you need the leading note in the melody. This all is, of course, simplified but should give the basic idea.

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  • I like both answers, but since you gave a nice layout and it was the first answer I'm giving you credit. Thanks for the explanation.
    – thank_you
    Commented Mar 15, 2013 at 3:44
  • Melodic use of the harmonic minor scale is uncommon, but one example from rock/pop music is the guitar solo in the song "(Don't Fear) The Reaper" by Blue Öyster Cult.
    – Kirk A
    Commented Apr 12, 2014 at 0:38
  • I'm confused by the use of the term "dominant chord" here. Doesn't a dominant 7th chord contain a minor 7th?
    – intuited
    Commented Apr 12, 2017 at 11:09
  • @intuited 7 refers to the 7th degree of the scale which, when raised, is the 3rd of the dominant (which may or may not be a dominant 7th chord).
    – nonpop
    Commented Apr 13, 2017 at 19:42
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I'm going to expand upon the answer already provided just to give some further clarification on the history and usage of each scale.

  • The Natural Minor scale is also known as the Aeolian Mode, one of the church modes from the plainchant period before the Renaissance. This particular scale can be created by starting on the 6th degree of any major scale, and playing an octave away from that, keeping the key signature the same. Thus:

C Major = C D E F G A B C
A Minor = A B C D E F G A

This is true for all natural minor scales.

  • The Harmonic Minor scale developed out of the practice of Musica Ficta, where performers and composers of chants were beginning to experiment and understand cadences. By raising the 7th degree, performers and composers were able to create additional tension / resolution for a tonal center, which led to a more satisfying result.

  • This created a problem however as rules of counterpoint were being developed during the early Renaissance. Moving an augmented interval in any one particular voice was considered incorrect voice-leading as it did not facilitate the smoothest possible voice-leading and was therefore jarring to the ear. The Melodic Minor scale was the solution to this problem.

As the scale ascends, the 6th and 7th degrees are raised in order to dissolve the augmented interval between the normally b6 and #7 scale degrees and create a leading tone that resolves strongly to a tonic. Thus:

A Melodic Minor = A B C D E F# G# A (ascending)

As the scale descends, it becomes a natural minor scale, with the 6th and 7th degrees now moving back to their original formation.

A Melodic Minor = A B C D E F G A (descending)

Hope that helps.

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  • An apposite answer, jj, it makes sense. Now, what examples of this are available in written music, with the melody using melodic min. ascending notes when the tune rises, and vice versa.
    – Tim
    Commented Feb 28, 2013 at 11:36
  • Thanks Tim, I appreciate it. The scale has been used so frequently throughout history that you can essentially look at any piece of music and see evidence of this. That said, looking into J.S.Bach, Haydn, or Handel will probably result is less digging on your part. Commented Feb 28, 2013 at 15:07
  • What's the point of calling the natural minor that way? can you ever distinguish it from the major scale if not played in that order?
    – Alvaro
    Commented Dec 28, 2017 at 19:39
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The differences are not very meaningful to music, but very prominent in musical pedagogy (unfortunately). In the Major (de:Dur, hart, lat: durus, en:hard) "gender", there are 7 fixed pitches, whereas in Minor (de:Moll, weich, lat: mollus, en:soft) two of them come in two flavours: the 6th and 7th can be minor or major. All of these combinations are in use, but there are some stereotypes, that lead to preferred sequences. So, for instance, in rising scales the major flavours are more often used than the minor ones. The natural Minor scale isn't very convincing by itself because its material is undistinguishable from Major, if there are no other clues.

You should know these three kinds of Minor, for examination purposes. But it's maybe more important to be aware, that there are no compositions at all in either of them.

If you look at Bach - who had surely a well-established feeling for Major and Minor - you'll see mostly only scale parts in use. Their ends or turning points are often the key dissonance for the Minor tonality: the diminished sixth. In the following example, I picked from Wikipedia, you see a scale part falling to the Major 7th, an upward jump by the diminished 6th, followed by another scale part:

enter image description here

So the sizes of the 6th and 7th in Minor are not controlled by one of "the three scales of Minor", but instead by the tonal (or musical) context (or purpose).

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  • Your second sentence summarizes the whole topic perfectly! Commented May 24, 2019 at 14:11
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All of the minor scales you mentioned have something different. Let's take the C minor scale for example:

  1. C natural minor scale is C D Eb F G Ab Bb C.

    the natural minor scale, also known as Aeolian scale, taken by itself. When a major scale and a natural minor scale have the same key signature, they are relative keys. A natural minor scale has the same notes as its relative major scale, but is built starting from the sixth note of the relative major scale. via Wikipedia

  2. C harmonic minor scale is C D Eb F G Ab B C.

  3. C melodic minor scale is (ascending) C D Eb F G A B C (descending) C Bb Ab G F Eb D C

    A harmonic minor scale differs from a natural minor scale in that the seventh note is raised one semitone. Melodic minor scales raise both the sixth and seventh notes one semitone when ascending, but when descending, the sixth and seventh notes are flattened, producing the natural minor scale. [..] The notes of the harmonic minor scale are the same as the natural minor except that the seventh degree is raised by one semitone, making an augmented second between the sixth and seventh degrees.

So, you could use any minor you like, depending on what you like.

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One of the answers noted that the natural minor scale is the Aeolian mode. But the harmonic minor scale isn't one of the seven modes. The seven modes come from cyclically permuting the interval sequence

Major / Ionian: W W H W W W H

Dorian: W H W W W H W

etc. Just keep moving the first letter to the end, until you come back around to Ionian again. As noted above, one of those is the natural minor scale.

But the harmonic minor scale takes the natural minor's W H W W H W W and raises the seventh, giving you this:

W H W W H (W+H) H

That three-semitone interval between the 6th and 7th makes it a fundamentally different beast.

Then, as also noted above, the melodic minor scale raises the 6th as well, giving

W H W W W W H

This is also not a mode (not a cyclic permutation of W W H W W W H). But it removes the three-semitone interval. As noted above, this is commonly used only for ascending notes, with natural minor being used for descent.

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  • I'll give this a +1 if you add some edits. I recommend (a) identifying which modes Aeolian and Dorian are, (b) stating explicitly that harmonic minor is not a mode of a major scale but includes one accidental compared to Aeolian (while melodic minor contains two accidentals compared to Aeolian), (c) adding a summary of your position, and (d) explaining why these are relevant distinctions. Perhaps your summary would involve a statement that an important difference is whether they're modes of a major scale. To explain why that is a meaningful/important distinction, you might appeal to harmony.
    – jdjazz
    Commented Jul 28, 2017 at 1:21

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