Ionian/Mixolydian Gapped Scales and Hybrids: Difference between revisions

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'''08 Little Sir Hugh''' (Cecil J. Sharp, 1916, ''One Hundred English Folk Songs'')
'''08 Little Sir Hugh''' (Cecil J. Sharp, 1916, ''One Hundred English Folk Songs'')


Link: http://folkopedia.info/wiki/08_Little_Sir_Hugh  
Link: [[08_Little_Sir_Hugh|Little Sir Hugh]]


Tune Analysis: G Ionian key signature but no F (7th). Hexatonic G Ionian/G Mixolydian gapped scale, Plagal.
Tune Analysis: G Ionian key signature but no F (7th). Hexatonic G Ionian/G Mixolydian gapped scale, Plagal.

Latest revision as of 00:12, 7 February 2021

Link to Ionian, Mixolydian, Dorian and Aeolian: Samples and Examples of the 4 Main Musical Scales in Celtic, Anglo-American and English Folk Songs

The Mixolydian scale is the same as the Ionian scale except that its seventh note is flattened by a semitone. To convert an Ionian to a Mixolydian key signature add a flat to, or remove a sharp from, it. Likewise, to convert a Mixolydian to an Ionian key signature, remove a flat from, or add a sharp to, it. Many Celtic, Anglo-American and English folk melodies are Ionian/Mixolydian hybrids. There may be a seventh that is sometimes flattened and sometimes not. Or the tune may be hexatonic, with no seventh at all. The Ionian and Mixolydian scales are thus quite similar to each other, and there are quite a few Ionian/Mixolydian gapped scales and quite a few Ionian/Mixolydian hybrids. Here are some examples.


08 Little Sir Hugh (Cecil J. Sharp, 1916, One Hundred English Folk Songs)

Link: Little Sir Hugh

Tune Analysis: G Ionian key signature but no F (7th). Hexatonic G Ionian/G Mixolydian gapped scale, Plagal.