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Mixolydian mode

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Mixolydian mode on C

The Mixolydian mode is a musical mode or diatonic scale. It has the same series of tones and semitones as the major scale, except the fifth (dominant) note is taken as the tonic or starting (beginning) pitch of the scale. It may also be considered a major scale with the leading tone moved down by a semitone.

The order of tones and semitones in a Mixolydian scale is TTSTTST (T = tone; S = semitone), while the major scale is TTSTTTS. The key signature varies accordingly (it will be the same as that of the major key a fifth below).

Incidentally, the order of Mixolydian tones and semitones is identical to the Dominant 7th scale. In other words, the C Mixolydian mode and the C Dominant 7th scale are identical.

Some examples:

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  • The G Mixolydian mode (Based on C major - on a piano it is all the white keys from one G to the next. GABCDEFG)
  • The C Mixolydian mode (Based on F major. CDEFGAB♭C)
  • The D Mixolydian mode (Based on G major. DEF♯GABCD)
  • The E Mixolydian mode (Based on A major. EF♯G♯ABC♯DE)

Contents

Greek Mixolydian

The idea of a Mixolydian mode comes from the music theory of ancient Greece. The ancient Greek Mixolydian mode was invented by Sappho, the 7th century B.C. poet and musician.[1] However, what the ancient Greeks thought of as Mixolydian was very different from the modern interpretation of the mode.

In Greek theory, the Mixolydian is the Hypolydian mode inverted: a descending scale of a whole tone followed by two inverted Lydian tetrachords (each being two whole tones followed by a semitone descending). This is the equivalent of playing all the 'white notes' of a piano from B to B, or B C D (E) | E F G A | B. This happens to be theoretically the same as Hyperdorian mode, but Mixolydian seems to have been the preferred name. It also seems that this Mixolydian mode was little used by the ancient Greeks, and that it was deemed unfit for any kind of music. It is the same as the modern Locrian mode.[citation needed]

Medieval Mixolydian and Hypomixolydian

Medieval European music scholars understood the Greek system of modes through the Latin works of Boethius. However, his work was misinterpreted, and the name Mixolydian came to be applied to one of the eight modes of mediaeval church music: the seventh mode. This mode does not run from B to B on white notes, as the Greek mode, but from G to G. This misinterpretation led to the current use of the term for the natural scale from G to G.

The seventh mode of western church music is an authentic mode based on and encompassing the natural scale from G to G, with the perfect fifth (the D in a G to G scale) as the dominant, reciting note or tenor.

Hand in hand with this mode goes the plagal eighth mode, which was termed Hypomixolydian (or under Mixolydian). This mode was based on the same scale, but used the perfect fourth (the C in a G to G scale) as the reciting note, and had a melodic range from the perfect fourth below the tonic to the perfect fifth above it.

Notable songs in Mixolydian mode

References

  1. ^ Carson, Anne (2003-09-12). If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho. Vintage, ix. ISBN 978-0375724510.  Carson attributes this fact to Aristoxenus, who, in turn (Carson writes), was citing Plutarch in his "On Music."
  2. ^ Anthony, Wendy (February 2007), "Building a Traditional Tune Repertoire: Old Joe Clark", Mandolin Sessions (Mel Bay Publications), http://melbay.com/mandolinsessions/feb07/Anthony.html. Retrieved on 27 June 2008 
  3. ^ Pollack, Alan W.. "Notes on "Dear Prudence"". Retrieved on 2008-08-07.
  4. ^ Allen, Patrick (1999). Developing Singing Matters. Oxford: Heinemann Educational Publishers, 22. ISBN 0-435-81018-9. OCLC 42040205. 
  5. ^ Morer, Jack; Rolling Stones (1995). Exile on Main Street. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard Corporation, 100. ISBN 0-7935-4094-1. OCLC 49627026. 

External links

Modes of the diatonic scale
Ionian (I) | Dorian (II) | Phrygian (III)
Lydian (IV) | Mixolydian (V) | Aeolian (VI) | Locrian (VII)


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mixolydian mode". Allthough most Wikipedia articles provide accurate information accuracy can not be guaranteed.



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