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    YoutubeMusic Theory Video SeriesA step-by-step guide to music theory fundamentals. These 60-second videos provide a clear, structured path to understanding how music works, optimized for a full-screen learning experience.YoutubeMusic Theory ShortsMaster music theory concepts in 60 seconds or less. Quick, vertical videos designed to give you essential theory knowledge in a fast-paced, mobile-friendly format.
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    1. Home
    2. Scale Library
    3. C
    4. Harmonic minor

    C Harmonic minor

    Minor scale with raised 7, the 1st mode of the harmonic minor system.


    Guitar diagrams

    Piano diagrams

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    Which intervals and notes are in the C Harmonic minor scale?

    Intervals from the tonic that build this scale step by step.

    Which chords can you play on the C Harmonic minor scale?

    Diatonic chords on each degree of this scale.

    To which mode does C Harmonic minor belong?

    Related modes that use the same notes with a different tonal center.

    Related scales for C Harmonic minor

    Explore scales that share many of the same notes and compare how their tonal center changes the sound.

    Practice the harmonic minor scale

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    Practice the harmonic minor scale

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    DegreeTriadSeventhExtendedScale
    I
    II
    III
    IV
    V
    VI
    VII

    The harmonic minor scale is a minor system with a dramatic leading-tone pull created by the raised seventh degree. It keeps the dark minor color of ♭3 and ♭6 while adding stronger tonal direction than natural minor. In the harmonic minor family, this scale is the 1st degree (1st mode), the parent source from which the other harmonic minor modes are derived.

    Construction and formula

    Harmonic minor follows the interval formula 1-2-♭3-4-5-♭6-7, with step pattern W-H-W-W-H-W+H-H. In A harmonic minor, the notes are A-B-C-D-E-F-G♯. Compared with natural minor (1-2-♭3-4-5-♭6-♭7), the defining change is that ♭7 is raised to 7.

    That raised seventh creates a wider melodic gap between ♭6 and 7, which gives harmonic minor its characteristic exotic tension. At the same time, it restores a strong leading tone into the tonic, making cadential motion more focused.

    Musical usage

    Harmonic minor is fundamental in tonal minor harmony, especially when a strong V-i pull is needed. It supports chords like V and vii° in minor keys while preserving a clear minor tonic identity.

    In improvisation and composition, harmonic minor is used when natural minor feels too open and melodic minor feels too smooth. Its color is especially effective in dramatic classical writing, jazz-influenced minor progressions, and cinematic harmonic movement.

    Examples

    • Minor-key cadences where V7 resolves strongly to i.
    • Melodic lines that emphasize the leading tone (7) resolving to 1.
    • Progressions mixing natural minor color with harmonic minor dominant function.
    • Practice studies comparing natural, harmonic, and melodic minor on one tonic.

    In practice

    Practice harmonic minor by isolating the motion ♭6-7-1 in multiple rhythmic shapes so the leading-tone pull becomes audible and intentional. Then alternate between natural minor and harmonic minor on the same root to hear exactly what changing ♭7 to 7 does to harmonic gravity.

    For improvisation, anchor phrases on stable tones (1, ♭3, 5) and treat 7 as a directional tone that resolves with purpose. For composition, use harmonic minor when you want minor mood plus stronger cadential definition and heightened tension-release behavior.

    C Hirajoshi
    C Minor major seven pentatonic
    C Minor hexatonic
    C Vietnamese one
    m
    m/ma7
    mM9
    Harmonic minor
    dim
    m7♭5
    Locrian sixth
    aug
    maj7♯5
    Major augmented
    m
    m7
    m11
    Dorian sharp four
    M
    7
    7♭9♭13
    Phrygian dominant
    M
    maj7
    maj9♯11
    Lydian sharp ninth
    dim
    dim7
    alt7
    Ultralocrian
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    0C
    2D
    3E♭
    5F
    7G
    8A♭
    11B
    Perfect unison
    Major second
    Minor third
    Perfect fourth
    Perfect fifth
    Minor sixth
    Major seventh
    C 5
    C M7♯5sus4
    C M7sus4
    C M9♯5sus4
    C M9sus4
    C m
    C m♯5
    C m/ma7
    C mM9
    C mMaj7♭6
    C mMaj9♭6
    C madd4
    C madd9
    C m♭6M7
    C sus2
    C sus24
    C sus4