Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Major_Locrian_scale> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 57 of
57
with 100 triples per page.
- Major_Locrian_scale abstract "In music, the major Locrian scale, also called the Locrian major scale, is the scale obtained by sharpening the second and third degrees of the Locrian mode. With a tonic of C, it consists of the notes C D E F G♭ A♭ B♭. It can be described as a whole tone scale extending from G♭ to E, with F introduced within the diminished third interval from E to G♭. The scale therefore shares with the Locrian mode the property of having a diminished fifth above the tonic.In English, Arabian scale may refer to what is known as the major Locrian scale. A version of the major Locrian scale is listed as mode 3 in the French translation of Safi Al-Din's treatise Kitab Al-Adwar. This was a Pythagorean version of the scale.Aside from this Arabic version, interest in the major Locrian is a phenomenon of the twentieth century, but the scale is definable in any meantone system. It is notable as one of the five proper seven-note scales in equal temperament, and as strictly proper in any meantone tuning with fifths flatter than 700 cents. If we take the tonic in the scale given above to be G♭ rather than C, we obtain the leading whole-tone scale, which with a tonic on C is C D E F♯ G♯ A♯ B; this can equally well be characterized as one of the five proper seven-note scales of equal temperament.The major Locrian scale is the 5th mode of the Neapolitan major scale, which may be used in conjunction with the Neapolitan chord, but is not limited to it. This scale is also known as melodic minor ♭2. Its modes and corresponding seventh chords are: melodic minor ♭2; Cmin/maj7 leading whole-tone; D♭maj7(♯5) Lydian augmented dominant (♯5, ♭7); E♭7(#5) Lydian Dominant ♭6; F7 major Locrian; G7(b5) Locrian ♮2 ♭4; Am7♭5 or A7+5 Locrian double flat3; i.e., T, ♭2, double flat3, ♭4, ♭5, ♭6, ♭7; B7+5The major Locrian scale has only two perfect fifths, but it has in some sense a complete cycle of thirds if one is willing to count a diminished third as a third: four major thirds, two minor thirds and a diminished third making up two octaves. In 12-equal temperament, the diminished third is enharmonically equivalent to a major second, but in other meantone systems it is wider and more nearly like a third.".
- Major_Locrian_scale thumbnail Major_locrian_C.png?width=300.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageID "5512887".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageLength "4569".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageRevisionID "666683181".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Alban_Berg.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Category:Heptatonic_scales.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Cent_(music).
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Diminished_fifth.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Diminished_third.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Enharmonic.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Enharmonically_equivalent.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Equal_temperament.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Howard_Hanson.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Kitab_Al-Adwar.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Locrian_mode.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Meantone_temperament.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Neapolitan_chord.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Neapolitan_scale.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Pelléas_et_Mélisande_(opera).
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Perfect_fifth.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Pythagorean_tuning.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Rothenberg_propriety.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Safi_ad-Din_al-Urmawi.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Safi_al-Din_al-Urmawi.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Set_theory_(music).
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Seven_Early_Songs_(Berg).
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Tritone.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Vincent_Persichetti.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink Whole_tone_scale.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLink File:Major_locrian_C.png.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLinkText "M Locrian scale".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLinkText "Major Locrian scale".
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageWikiLinkText "major Locrian scale".
- Major_Locrian_scale hasPhotoCollection Major_Locrian_scale.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Audio.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Music.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Page_needed.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Major_Locrian_scale wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Scales.
- Major_Locrian_scale subject Category:Heptatonic_scales.
- Major_Locrian_scale hypernym Scale.
- Major_Locrian_scale type Aircraft.
- Major_Locrian_scale type Article.
- Major_Locrian_scale type Article.
- Major_Locrian_scale type Scale.
- Major_Locrian_scale comment "In music, the major Locrian scale, also called the Locrian major scale, is the scale obtained by sharpening the second and third degrees of the Locrian mode. With a tonic of C, it consists of the notes C D E F G♭ A♭ B♭. It can be described as a whole tone scale extending from G♭ to E, with F introduced within the diminished third interval from E to G♭.".
- Major_Locrian_scale label "Major Locrian scale".
- Major_Locrian_scale sameAs m.0dq83s.
- Major_Locrian_scale sameAs Q6738232.
- Major_Locrian_scale sameAs Q6738232.
- Major_Locrian_scale wasDerivedFrom Major_Locrian_scale?oldid=666683181.
- Major_Locrian_scale depiction Major_locrian_C.png.
- Major_Locrian_scale isPrimaryTopicOf Major_Locrian_scale.