Pentatonic: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 03:52, 12 March 2026

A pentatonic scale is a scale with 5 tones per period. It is one of the most commonly used types of scale in the world.

  • The familiar major and minor pentatonic scales are modes of the 2L 3s MOS scale.
  • Equipentatonic scales are scales with 5 roughly equally spaced tones per octave, common in some musical traditions. The exactly equal form of the equipentatonic scale is 5edo.
  • 5 equal frequency divisions instead of pitch gives a pentatonic overtone scale, the first mode of 5afdo.

Pentatonic scales may sometimes be used as chords rather than scales, in which case they are called pentads.

See also

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