Bebop Major Scale is an eight-note scale derived from the major scale, used in jazz improvisation to align chord tones precisely on strong beats within continuous eighth-note lines. It is not a separate tonal system, but an extension of the major scale with an added chromatic passing tone that improves rhythmic placement of harmonic tones.
Construction and formula
The Bebop Major Scale is based on the major scale with an added chromatic passing tone between the 5 and the 6.
In C, this yields: C–D–E–F–G–G♯–A–B.
Its interval formula is: 1–2–3–4–5–♯5–6–7.
This added chromatic tone creates an eight-note structure that allows chord tones (1, 3, 5, 7) to consistently fall on strong beats when played in steady eighth notes.
Musical usage
The Bebop Major Scale is primarily used over major seventh chords (Imaj7) and related tonal contexts in jazz. Its main function is melodic: it enables fluid eighth-note lines where harmonic chord tones are metrically stabilized.
The chromatic passing tone (♯5) is not treated as a resolution tone but as a linear connector that preserves forward motion while maintaining harmonic clarity.
Examples
- Jazz improvisation over major ii–V–I progressions.
- Swing lines emphasizing chord tones on downbeats.
- Continuous eighth-note bebop phrasing over maj7 harmony.
- Practice patterns alternating chord tones and passing tones.
In practice
Practice the major scale first, then insert the chromatic passing tone between 5 and 6. When played in continuous eighth notes, ensure that chord tones (C, E, G, B in C major) consistently land on strong beats.
In improvisation, prioritize chord tone targeting over scalar motion. The chromatic note functions purely as a passing tone that connects stable harmonic points.