Enigmatic scale

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Enigmatic scale on C[1] <phonos file="Enigmatic scale on C.mid">Play</phonos>.
File:Enigmatic scale on C descending.png
Descending enigmatic scale on C[2][3] is distinguished by F, a lowered fourth degree Audio file "Enigmatic scale on C descending.mid" not found.

The enigmatic scale (scala enigmatica) is an unusual musical scale, with elements of both major and minor scales, as well as the whole-tone scale. It was originally published in a Milan journal as a musical challenge, with an invitation to harmonize it in some way.

Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi, who supposedly invented the scale[4][not in citation given] actually returned to composition with this, "arbitrary scale,"[5] in his "Ave Maria (sulla scala enigmatica)" (1889, revised 1898), in response to a challenge printed in the Milan Gazzetta musicale to employ a musical conundrum.[6] The "Ave Maria", compiled as part of the Quattro Pezzi Sacri (1898) [4 sacred pieces], has been described as, "that still almost incomprehensible into-one-another-gliding of harmonies over the entirely 'unnatural' scala enigmatica".[7] The piece features the scale both in its harmonies and as a cantus firmus throughout the short piece[8] in half-note values in the bass and then each successively higher voice accompanying, "queer counterpoint which...is far-fetched and difficult of intonation; [and] the total effect is almost, if not quite, as musical as it is curious".[3]

The scale, is as follows:

C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C

And has a formula of: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7.

With the musical steps as following: Semitone, Tone and a half, Tone, Tone, Tone, Semitone, Semitone.

The scale lacks a perfect fourth and a perfect fifth above the starting note. Both the fourth and fifth degrees of a scale form the basis of standard chord progressions, which help establish the tonic.

The scale was used by guitarist Joe Satriani in his piece "The Enigmatic"[1] from Not of This Earth (1986), Monte Pittman with the song "Missing" on "The Power Of Three", and by pianist Juan María Solare in his piano miniature "Ave Verdi" (2013).

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 Peter Fischer (2000). Rock Guitar Secrets, p.162. ISBN 3-927190-62-4.
  2. Barrie Jones (1999). The Hutchinson Concise Dictionary of Music, p.197. ISBN 1-57958-178-1.
  3. 3.0 3.1 William Henry Hadow (1905). The Oxford history of music, p.223. Second edition, Vol. 6.
  4. Latham, Alison (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of Musical Terms, p.159. ISBN 0-19-860698-2.
  5. Willi Apel (1969). Harvard dictionary of music, p.753. 2nd edition. ISBN 0-674-37501-7.
  6. Barbara Meier (2005). Verdi, p.133. ISBN 1-904341-05-5.
  7. University of Chicago (1955). Chicago Review, p.31. Vol. 9.
  8. Scott L. Balthazar, ed. (2004). The Cambridge Companion to Verdi, p.180. ISBN 0-521-63535-7.


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