One cool fact about the harmonic major scale is that it is related to the harmonic minor scale by inversion. If you list the intervals between the notes in C harmonic major (C D E F G Ab B C) you have 2 2 1 2 1 3 1, and these in reverse order become 1 3 1 2 1 2 2 where if we apply these starting on, say G, gives the scale G Ab B C D Eb F G which is the fifth mode of C harmonic minor. (I picked G so that you get two scales with lots of tones in common).
One cool fact about the harmonic major scale is that it is related to the harmonic minor scale by inversion. If you list the intervals between the notes in C harmonic major (C D E F G Ab B C) you have 2 2 1 2 1 3 1, and these in reverse order become 1 3 1 2 1 2 2 where if we apply these starting on, say G, gives the scale G Ab B C D Eb F G which is the fifth mode of C harmonic minor. (I picked G so that you get two scales with lots of tones in common).
Amazing lesson. So nice to find more ways to use this sound. Thank you!
Glad you like it 😃
Good explanation and usage.
Lovely sounds on that intro.
Mixob9 is Ted Greene's Altered type 1 (Single note soloing)
Thanks 👍
A harmonic minor plus C harmonic mayor equals Barry Harry's scale