What scales are used in bebop?

What scales are used in bebop?

The five types of bebop scales are:

  • The major bebop scale.
  • The dorian bebop scale.
  • The melodic minor bebop scale.
  • The harmonic minor bebop scale.
  • The dominant bebop scale.

What is a bebop major scale?

The bebop major scale or the major sixth diminished scale is derived from the Ionian mode (major scale) and has a chromatic passing tone between the 5th and 6th notes. Barry Harris explains that it is derived from a major sixth chord from the root, and a fully diminished chord from the second degree.

How do you make a bebop scale?

It is formed by adding a chromatic passing note between the 1 and b7 of the Lydian dominant scale (one of the melodic minor modes). The bebop Lydian scale can be used on dominant chords with a #11, such as the dominant chords of a tritone substitution. For example: a normal V-I in C major is G7-Cmaj7.

What is bebop scale piano?

Bebop Scales are just your regular scales and modes – such as the Major, melodic minor, Dorian and Mixolydian – but with an added chromatic note. So: Bebop scales = Traditional scales + 1 chromatic passing note.

Where is bebop scale used?

It is important to note that in theory and in practice, bebop scales are generally thought of as descending scales, meaning they make the most sense, sound the best, and are most often used when playing descending stepwise melodies.

What bebop means?

Bebop (or “bop”) is a type of small-band modern jazz music originating in the early 1940s. Bebop has roots in swing music and involves fast tempos, adventurous improvisation, complex harmonies and chord progressions, and a focus on individual virtuosity.

What scales did Charlie Parker use?

In basic musical terms, the typical chords (the “stereotyped changes”) played during the Swing era in the 1930s were confined to the 1-3-5-7 of the eight-note do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-ti-do scale. Charlie Parker began to play and create melodies using the 9-11-13 of the scale in the next eight notes, in the next octave!

How do you use bebop?

The most common way to use the bebop scale is over dominant 7th chords… Practice applying the bebop scale to static dominant chords. Think of the Blues, the bridge to Rhythm Changes, or any number of jazz standards with dominant chords that last for a measure or longer.