As a companion to the Arpeggios! thread, I pose this question:
Who (besides me :-)) knows upon what scale is "Miserlou" based?
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Joined: Apr 10, 2012 Posts: 28 |
As a companion to the Arpeggios! thread, I pose this question: Who (besides me :-)) knows upon what scale is "Miserlou" based? |
Joined: Mar 15, 2011 Posts: 8528 Back in Piitsburgh, Pennsylvania, where I grew up. |
Here are some previous efforts to answer this question. This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got. |
Joined: Jan 16, 2010 Posts: 214 Somerset, England |
Ah, Johhny, you said a phrase that gets me on my soap box ( nothing personal mind you). What scale is it based? BASED!! Which usually means the tune takes alot of notes from a particular scale but the artist has added a fair smattering of notes that arent in that scale in order to compose the song. So, the tune is in what scale now these extra notes have been added? Could be anything really, call it what you like, dobroidian maybe? As I said on the arps thread, I like theory but surely the best sounding scale is the set of notes you use to compose your tune, ant need to pigeon hole them? |
Joined: Apr 10, 2012 Posts: 28 |
Agreed Surfocaster and no offense taken at all. Music is just music... it's never a bad thing or something to get upset over! I'm not one to stand on ceremony either or attempt to "pidgeon hole" things, but...you can call an apple a peach if you want, but an apple is still an apple and a peach is a peach unless you don't already know what an apple or a peach are. :-)I'm all for clarity in language, so if something has a name, it simplifies the communication process to use that name. As far as scales with added notes go, I believe you're referring to synthetic scales and Miserlou isn't from one of those. Thanks for the link Noel, but there is an definitive answer to this question. No guesswork necessary!! I skimmed the link and didn't see it, but if it's there, I missed it. My bad. Hint: It is an actual, dyed-in-the-wool, honest-to-john (pun intended) scale, but it can have more than one name and Miserlou specifically is based on a mode from this scale. |
Joined: May 14, 2007 Posts: 1753 |
According to Wikipedia, which is infallible, it's the double harmonic, aka the Arabic scale, aka the Byzantine scale. Is that it? |
Joined: Apr 10, 2012 Posts: 28 |
Wiki is cheating, but that's correct!!! It's also called a Hungarian or Gypsy Minor. Personally with regard to Miserlou, I always thought of it as being in the 5th mode of an A harmonic minor scale with a raised 4th degree and it is that, but that's also too cumbersome and I knew there had to be a simpler way to think of it. I also find it interesting that unlike major or melodic, harmonic or natural minor that there is no tertially based chord to be built on that raised 4th degree and this scale has consecutive half-steps follwed by a leap of a third! How cool is it that to harmonize this scale consistently and evenly, you have to start with 4ths!?!?!?!? Very cool?!?!?!?!?!?!?! |
Joined: Jul 18, 2009 Posts: 499 |
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Joined: Jan 04, 2011 Posts: 1588 Berlin L-Berg |
The 'official' guitar book says this, but I think it's a trap: |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 10331 southern Michigan |
JohnnyDobro wrote:
I don't believe the Hungarian scale is the same as the Byzantine scale, though I forget the differences now. A few years ago, I sat down and figured out all the differences between several more exotic, middle-eastern/Indian/Mediterrenean scales: Byzantine (AKA Miserlou & Hava Nagila), Phrygian, Harmonic Minor and Hungarian, and maybe one or two others that are escaping me right now. I practiced those quite a bit, and I think at this point I've kinda absorbed them into my musical vocabulary. But I wouldn't be able to tell you exactly what they are right now. I seem to remember that The primary differences have to do with the major vs minor 3rds, combined in 'unorthodox' ways with major vs. minor 7ths and sometimes flattened 2nds. I do truly love the sound of those scales, and I think one of the major reasons why I'm attracted to surf music is that it's so easy to incorporate those exotic sounds into it. On the other hand, I mostly dislike the sound of the more jazzy scales, which often are like fingernails on the chalkboard to my ears - to overgeneralize more than a bit. Ivan |
Joined: Apr 10, 2012 Posts: 28 |
The only minor scale that will suffer a diatonic key signature is natural minor, which is the 6th mode of the major scale. In the same sense, Hungarian minor is the 4th mode of the Byzantine scale, if memory serves. I'm with you Ivan, I love experimenting with new things and just like anything else in life, I keep what I need and leave the rest behind. |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 10331 southern Michigan |
JohnnyDobro wrote:
Huh??? I must admit to only have some vague notion of what you're talking about. Here's how I think about it - really boneheaded and simplistic, but it works for me! Phrygian - look it up (major scale with flattened 2nd, 6th and 7th?) Harmonic Minor - regular Minor with a major 7th replacing the minor 7th Hungarian - regular Minor with a raised 4th and (I think) a major 7th (though it can also be played with a minor 7th - though that scale probably has a different name) That's alls I know. Maybe. I may know less. Ivan |
Joined: Jan 17, 2008 Posts: 2188 Atlanta, GA |
my head hurts —
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Joined: Oct 23, 2007 Posts: 385 Boca Raton, Florida |
On the byzantine derived from the phrygian: I think the flatted third is also raised a half step, to a natural, along with seventh. |
Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 10331 southern Michigan |
Strat-o-rama wrote:
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying, but both the phrygian and byzantine scales have major thirds. The only difference between the two is the seventh. Check out Wikipedia: Phrygian dominant
Actually, again according to Wikipedia, Phrygian dominant and the Spanish Gypsy scales are one and the same: The Phrygian dominant is also known as the Spanish gypsy scale, because it resembles the scales found in flamenco music (see Flamenco mode). Flamenco music uses the Phrygian scale, together with a modified scale resembling the Arab maqām Ḥijāzī (like the Phrygian dominant but with a major sixth scale degree), and a bimodal configuration using both major and minor second and third scale degrees (Katz 2001).
It appears that most of us are just groping in the dark - but we may end up somewhere interesting yet! —Ivan |
Joined: Jul 24, 2012 Posts: 2762 Finknabad, Squinkistan |
Misirlou is in the scale which resembles the Byzantine Tone 6 or more properly Plagal Tone 2 (plagal indicating the relationship of the perfect 4th from tonic) It's an old Anatolian melody popular among Rembetes of Piraeus, the emigres from the population exchange that happened after the collapse of the Greek "Megali Idea" to recapture Constantinople... it's also well known throughout the Levant, from whence Dick Dale Hales. It's essentially an Oud tune adapted to the fretted guitar, which changes the intonation. Tremolo picking is also very Oudistic. JohnnyDobro wrote: — |
Joined: Jul 30, 2016 Posts: 888 |
It just occurred to me how weird it is that the scale used in Misirlou has three notes in a row in it. In the context of the song, it starts on E, then hits F, and ends on Eb. I found this video in which the guy mentions that peculiarity and also demonstrates how and why they switched the scale for the other instruments. Worth a watch. |
Joined: Jul 04, 2010 Posts: 369 Ottawa |
I always thought Misirlou scale as a Phrygian Dominant scale with a maj7. Never really named it but I've seen it called double harmonic often and called it that too. Writing this out made things seem more complicated but it feels simple to me because it's how my brain was able to understand it best and help me when I was stuck years ago. I tend to switch my mental focus per chord change so I use a few extra modes to make each chord a different "thing" in my head. I also tend to think in "arpeggios plus extra notes" more than I do in scales. Harmonic Minor 1 2 b3 4 5 b6 7 I swap in what I call Gypsy Minor (harmonic minor with #4 ... maybe the name is wrong oh well) and it's modes whenever I feel like it. I say I see these more as variations on harmonic minor and it's modes than anything. Gypsy Minor: 1 2 b3 #4 5 b6 7 |
Joined: Jul 30, 2016 Posts: 888 |
It's fascinating to me to read through these comments and see how people understand and approach the theory differently. One of the main divergences I see is in how people think of modes of a given scale. Some people memorize the various adjustments in where the sharps and flats lie--that is, they describe each mode by how the parent scale is modified to achieve it--whereas others, like me, just think of each mode as a different starting point on the parent scale. I think ideally, we would all think of them in both ways. |
Joined: Apr 24, 2006 Posts: 1618 Ithaca, NY |
To further complicate things, you could also think of it as the fifth mode of the harmonic minor with a sharp 4. Since Misirlou is in E(something) it's the fifth of A harmonic minor, with a D#. |
Joined: Jan 15, 2019 Posts: 1515 |
Yeah I think its Phrygian at least the way Dick Dale played it on the recording...There is a quick slide from 5th fret (A) up to the 10th (D) fret on the low E string as a opener or intro, then starts on open E Phrygian https://jguitar.com/scale?root=E&scale=Phrygian&fret=0&labels=none¬es=sharps I like the live version better with the Spanish Kiss lick from one of his other songs he incorporated into the tune on the third turn around. I always thought that was the better version. I like to play thinking positions or licks rather than scales myself and vari stuff a little bit when scales do pop in my head at the moment. |