Whole tone scale Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In music, a whole tone scale is a scale in which each note is separated from its neighbors by the interval of a whole step. There are only two whole tone scales, both hexachords, each using half of the pitcheses in the chromatic scale:
- {C, D, E, F#, G#, A#}
- {B, Db, Eb, F, G, A}.
Claude Debussy and other Impressionist composers made extensive use of whole tone scales; since they are symmetrical, whole tone scales don't give a strong impression of the tonic or tonality. The whole tone scale was also used by Alban Berg in his Violin Concerto, and by Bela Bartók in his String Quartet No. 5.
The whole tone scale is interval cycle 2, or C2. Since there are only two transpositions of the whole tone scale it is either C20 or C21.
