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Eb enigmatic major

Eb enigmatic major scale

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Construction

Step pattern (W = whole step, H = half step, A = augmented second, 3 half steps): H-A-W-W-W-H-H.

Formula (intervals from the root): 1-b2-3-#4-#5-#6-7

The enigmatic major scale opens with a b2-to-3 augmented second -- a jarring 3-half-step leap from Phrygian (a mode defined by its b2 opening, giving it a dark, Spanish-sounding quality) darkness into major brightness. From there, three consecutive whole steps pass through #4, #5, and #6 before two half steps close the octave. The result is a scale that resists conventional tonality at every turn.

Origin and Relationships

  • A synthetic scale created in 1888 by Adolfo Crescentini as a musical puzzle. Verdi used it the following year in his harmonization of Ave Maria.
  • Contains one augmented second (b2 to 3) and three consecutive augmented degrees (#4, #5, #6) -- a combination found in no diatonic scale (scales derived from the major scale system) or common synthetic scale (scales constructed by formula rather than derived from a parent).
  • Compare to Enigmatic Minor: both share b2 and #4. Enigmatic Major has natural 3, #5, and #6. Enigmatic Minor has b3, natural 5, and #6. The third degree (major vs. minor) sets them apart most immediately.

Harmonic Context

  • aug: An augmented triad (three notes each a major third apart -- 1-3-#5). This is the most stable chord available from the scale, which says something about how unstable the scale is overall.
  • Color scale: The three consecutive augmented degrees make standard chord progressions impractical. This scale works best as melodic material over drones or in freely atonal contexts (music without a tonal center or key).
  • Chromatic or experimental harmony: Suited to film scoring, contemporary classical, and any setting where disorientation is the goal.

Characteristic Tones

The intervals that give this scale its distinctive sound:

  • b2: Opens the scale with Phrygian weight, immediately followed by the augmented second leap to natural 3. That b2-to-3 whiplash is the scale's most recognizable gesture.
  • 3 (major third): Creates the augmented second against b2 and establishes major quality on the tonic -- a bright core surrounded by extreme alteration.
  • #4, #5, #6: Three consecutive augmented degrees. This run of three consecutive whole steps connects to the whole tone scale sound -- that floating, centerless quality -- but embedded within a scale that has half steps elsewhere, creating an unusual hybrid of stability and drift.

Melodic Applications

The b2-to-3 augmented second is the melodic hook -- use it as an opening gesture or a point of return. From 3, the whole-step ascent through #4-#5-#6 creates a floating, unanchored line that resists resolution until the 7-to-1 half step at the top. Target the augmented triad (1-3-#5) as a reference point within phrases, and let the scale's instability serve the music rather than fighting it.

Practice Seeds

The b2-to-3 leap. Play b2-3 as an isolated interval, then embed it in a phrase. Train your ear on this augmented second -- it is the scale's signature sound and the gateway into its character.

Augmented degree run. Play 3-#4-#5-#6-7-1 ascending. Hear how three consecutive whole steps through augmented degrees create a floating, centerless line -- this is what separates the enigmatic scale from all diatonic relatives.

Compare to Enigmatic Minor. Play both from the same root. Notice the 3 versus b3 and #5 versus natural 5 -- the major variant is brighter and more dissonant in the upper register.

Otherworldly phrase. Compose a short melody that opens with the b2-to-3 leap and ascends through the augmented degrees. Capture the scale's intended effect -- mystery and tonal ambiguity.

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