What kind of guitar scale did I “discover”?












4















I barely know any music theory but I love experimenting with notes and finding two-note chords that sound cool on my guitar. I've been playing this progression below and I've found that any three notes together sound really good, as well as going up/down the scale. Is there a name for this?



e  --2------5--
B ----3----5--
G --2---4-----
D --2---4-----
A ------------
E ------------


So it starts on E and goes W 3H W 3H W W 3H.










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    4















    I barely know any music theory but I love experimenting with notes and finding two-note chords that sound cool on my guitar. I've been playing this progression below and I've found that any three notes together sound really good, as well as going up/down the scale. Is there a name for this?



    e  --2------5--
    B ----3----5--
    G --2---4-----
    D --2---4-----
    A ------------
    E ------------


    So it starts on E and goes W 3H W 3H W W 3H.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    PascLeRasc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      4












      4








      4








      I barely know any music theory but I love experimenting with notes and finding two-note chords that sound cool on my guitar. I've been playing this progression below and I've found that any three notes together sound really good, as well as going up/down the scale. Is there a name for this?



      e  --2------5--
      B ----3----5--
      G --2---4-----
      D --2---4-----
      A ------------
      E ------------


      So it starts on E and goes W 3H W 3H W W 3H.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      PascLeRasc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I barely know any music theory but I love experimenting with notes and finding two-note chords that sound cool on my guitar. I've been playing this progression below and I've found that any three notes together sound really good, as well as going up/down the scale. Is there a name for this?



      e  --2------5--
      B ----3----5--
      G --2---4-----
      D --2---4-----
      A ------------
      E ------------


      So it starts on E and goes W 3H W 3H W W 3H.







      theory scales






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      PascLeRasc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      PascLeRasc is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




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      edited 2 days ago









      Richard

      38.5k687164




      38.5k687164






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      asked 2 days ago









      PascLeRascPascLeRasc

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      New contributor





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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          1 Answer
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          11














          As listed, your scale includes E F♯ A B D E; you then add a remaining F♯ A that is, strictly speaking, not necessary to determine this collection.



          You have a pentatonic scale (so named because it has five notes), but more than that it's a rotation of the standard major pentatonic scale.



          A normal major pentatonic scale with this collection starts on D: D E F♯ A B D. But you rotate it to begin on E instead. Perhaps there's some name out there for this somewhere, otherwise we can just call it the second mode of the major pentatonic, "second mode" indicating that we rotate the collection to start on the second pitch.



          One reason "that any three notes together sound really good" might be that this pentatonic collection is what we call anhemitonic, meaning there are no half steps. As such, no matter what pitches from the collection you play, there will never be a half-step dissonance within that subset.






          share|improve this answer


























          • That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

            – PascLeRasc
            2 days ago






          • 2





            In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

            – syntonicC
            2 days ago








          • 1





            Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

            – Tim
            yesterday








          • 2





            The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

            – Rosie F
            yesterday











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          11














          As listed, your scale includes E F♯ A B D E; you then add a remaining F♯ A that is, strictly speaking, not necessary to determine this collection.



          You have a pentatonic scale (so named because it has five notes), but more than that it's a rotation of the standard major pentatonic scale.



          A normal major pentatonic scale with this collection starts on D: D E F♯ A B D. But you rotate it to begin on E instead. Perhaps there's some name out there for this somewhere, otherwise we can just call it the second mode of the major pentatonic, "second mode" indicating that we rotate the collection to start on the second pitch.



          One reason "that any three notes together sound really good" might be that this pentatonic collection is what we call anhemitonic, meaning there are no half steps. As such, no matter what pitches from the collection you play, there will never be a half-step dissonance within that subset.






          share|improve this answer


























          • That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

            – PascLeRasc
            2 days ago






          • 2





            In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

            – syntonicC
            2 days ago








          • 1





            Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

            – Tim
            yesterday








          • 2





            The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

            – Rosie F
            yesterday
















          11














          As listed, your scale includes E F♯ A B D E; you then add a remaining F♯ A that is, strictly speaking, not necessary to determine this collection.



          You have a pentatonic scale (so named because it has five notes), but more than that it's a rotation of the standard major pentatonic scale.



          A normal major pentatonic scale with this collection starts on D: D E F♯ A B D. But you rotate it to begin on E instead. Perhaps there's some name out there for this somewhere, otherwise we can just call it the second mode of the major pentatonic, "second mode" indicating that we rotate the collection to start on the second pitch.



          One reason "that any three notes together sound really good" might be that this pentatonic collection is what we call anhemitonic, meaning there are no half steps. As such, no matter what pitches from the collection you play, there will never be a half-step dissonance within that subset.






          share|improve this answer


























          • That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

            – PascLeRasc
            2 days ago






          • 2





            In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

            – syntonicC
            2 days ago








          • 1





            Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

            – Tim
            yesterday








          • 2





            The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

            – Rosie F
            yesterday














          11












          11








          11







          As listed, your scale includes E F♯ A B D E; you then add a remaining F♯ A that is, strictly speaking, not necessary to determine this collection.



          You have a pentatonic scale (so named because it has five notes), but more than that it's a rotation of the standard major pentatonic scale.



          A normal major pentatonic scale with this collection starts on D: D E F♯ A B D. But you rotate it to begin on E instead. Perhaps there's some name out there for this somewhere, otherwise we can just call it the second mode of the major pentatonic, "second mode" indicating that we rotate the collection to start on the second pitch.



          One reason "that any three notes together sound really good" might be that this pentatonic collection is what we call anhemitonic, meaning there are no half steps. As such, no matter what pitches from the collection you play, there will never be a half-step dissonance within that subset.






          share|improve this answer















          As listed, your scale includes E F♯ A B D E; you then add a remaining F♯ A that is, strictly speaking, not necessary to determine this collection.



          You have a pentatonic scale (so named because it has five notes), but more than that it's a rotation of the standard major pentatonic scale.



          A normal major pentatonic scale with this collection starts on D: D E F♯ A B D. But you rotate it to begin on E instead. Perhaps there's some name out there for this somewhere, otherwise we can just call it the second mode of the major pentatonic, "second mode" indicating that we rotate the collection to start on the second pitch.



          One reason "that any three notes together sound really good" might be that this pentatonic collection is what we call anhemitonic, meaning there are no half steps. As such, no matter what pitches from the collection you play, there will never be a half-step dissonance within that subset.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 2 days ago

























          answered 2 days ago









          RichardRichard

          38.5k687164




          38.5k687164













          • That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

            – PascLeRasc
            2 days ago






          • 2





            In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

            – syntonicC
            2 days ago








          • 1





            Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

            – Tim
            yesterday








          • 2





            The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

            – Rosie F
            yesterday



















          • That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

            – PascLeRasc
            2 days ago






          • 2





            In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

            – syntonicC
            2 days ago








          • 1





            Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

            – Tim
            yesterday








          • 2





            The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

            – Rosie F
            yesterday

















          That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

          – PascLeRasc
          2 days ago





          That's perfect! Thanks, now I know what to look for to play more of these.

          – PascLeRasc
          2 days ago




          2




          2





          In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

          – syntonicC
          2 days ago







          In the Western musical tradition this scale is called the "Suspended Pentatonic Scale". It goes by many other names around the world depending on the culture.

          – syntonicC
          2 days ago






          1




          1





          Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

          – Tim
          yesterday







          Rotate a little more and we get the guitarists' favourite - B minor pent. And you state the reason both maj. and min. pents work so well - no semitone dissonances available. +1.

          – Tim
          yesterday






          2




          2





          The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

          – Rosie F
          yesterday





          The only intervals are perfect fifths, thirds, major seconds and the complements of all these. And octaves. So not only are there no semitones (i.e. minor seconds and augmented unisons) there are no diminished fifths/augmented fourths or chromatically-altered intervals either.

          – Rosie F
          yesterday










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