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5.2.2: Harmonic Minor

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    Functional HarmonyArtistic rendering of a dominant chord with a tension face on the leading tone and a relieved face on the tonic

    Arguably, the most important tonal relationship in Western music is the relationship between the leading tone (seventh scale degree) and the tonic (first/eighth scale degree). If you sit at a piano and play a major scale, but pause at the seventh scale degree, the desire for the note to resolve up one more half step will be so strong you probably will not be able to leave it without resolving up to the tonic.

    Everything hinges on this relationship. It is what creates the tension in the music that then wants to resolve. In a major key, this happens through the tonic-dominant relationship. The dominant chord (which includes the leading tone) creates the tension, and the tonic is the resolution of the tension.

    Harmonic Minor

    A harmonic minor scale with raised 7th scale degree

    The harmonic minor scale differs from the natural minor scale because it includes the leading tone (the note a half-step lower than the tonic) which, explained above, creates a strong pull to the tonic note. For example, in the A natural minor scale, the dominant chord that is created on the fifth scale degree is E-G-B, a minor triad. The distance between G (seventh scale degree) and A (first/eighth scale degree) is a whole step. The whole step relationship doesn't create a very strong pull to the tonic. In order for our ear to really hear and establish A as our tonal center, we need that distance to be a half step and the chord that is built on the fifth scale degree to be a major triad.

    By raising the seventh scale degree, as shown in the scale above, the E minor triad is turned into an E major triad (G-natural becomes G-sharp). Harmonically speaking, our dominant triad is now major and the leading tone found in the chord will strongly resolve up a half step to the tonic note (A). The relationship between G-sharp and A propels the music forward.

    The Sound

    The key characteristics of harmonic minor are:

    1. The presence of the lowered third scale degree. This gives it a minor sound.
    2. The presence of the raised seventh scale degree. This gives us a leading tone to the tonic that aurally establishes the tonic.

    Listen to a harmonic minor scale and focus on hearing those distinct scale degrees.

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    This page titled 5.2.2: Harmonic Minor is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.

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