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E♭ Bebop Dominant

The E♭ bebop dominant scale is an eight-note jazz scale derived from the E♭ Mixolydian mode with an added chromatic passing tone between the minor seventh and root. This essential bebop scale adds a major seventh (D natural) to the traditional E♭ dominant sound, creating the note sequence E♭-F-G-A♭-B♭-C-D♭-D-E♭ that allows chord tones to land consistently on downbeats during eighth-note improvisation. Built from the fifth degree of A♭ Major, the E♭ bebop dominant scale is essential for jazz pianists improvising over E♭7 dominant chords in jazz standards and blues progressions.

Symbol
E♭7 bebop
Key
e flat
Scale Type
bebop dominant
Cardinality
octatonic
Number of Notes
9
Notes
E♭, F, G, A♭, B♭, C, D♭, D, E♭
Intervals from Root
M2, M3, P4, P5, M6, m7, M7

The E♭ Bebop Dominant Scale Structure

The E♭ bebop dominant scale follows the interval formula of 2-2-1-2-2-1-1-1 semitones, producing the notes E♭, F, G, A♭, B♭, C, D♭, and D. The chromatic passing tone (D natural) creates an eight-note structure ensuring chord tones (E♭, G, B♭, D♭) fall on strong beats during eighth-note improvisation. This rhythmic alignment, developed by bebop pioneers like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, revolutionized jazz improvisation by maintaining harmonic emphasis during rapid scalar passages.

Application in Jazz Standards

The E♭ bebop dominant scale serves as a primary improvisational tool over E♭7 (E♭ dominant seventh) chords in jazz contexts. Tunes like "Autumn Leaves" (which modulates through E♭7), "Take Five," "Body and Soul," and "Satin Doll" feature E♭7 dominant harmony where this scale creates authentic bebop lines. In ii-V-I progressions resolving to A♭ major (Bbm7-E♭7-A♭maj7), the E♭ bebop dominant scale provides smooth voice leading and characteristic bebop chromaticism.

Piano Practice Techniques

For effective piano practice of the E♭ bebop dominant scale, use consistent fingering: right hand ascending from E♭: 3(E♭)-1(F)-2(G)- 3(A♭)-4(B♭)-1(C)-2(D♭)-3(D)-4(E♭). Set your metronome to 60-80 BPM and practice in strict eighth notes, emphasizing chord tones (E♭, G, B♭, D♭) on downbeats. Progress to various rhythmic groupings and practice through different octaves to develop facility across the keyboard.

Harmonic Applications

In the key of A♭ major, the progression Bbm7-E♭7-A♭maj7 provides perfect context for the E♭ bebop dominant scale: play B♭ Dorian over Bbm7, switch to E♭ bebop dominant over E♭7, and resolve to A♭ major. The scale also works in E♭ blues contexts and modal settings, making it indispensable for jazz improvisation.

Relationships to Other E♭ Scales

The E♭ bebop dominant scale shares its foundation with the E♭ Mixolydian mode, differing only by the D natural chromatic passing tone. The E♭ bebop major scale serves as the parallel bebop scale. Jazz pianists develop fluency with multiple E♭ dominant scale options—bebop dominant, Mixolydian, altered— learning to choose based on harmonic context.

Songs in E♭ Bebop Dominant

Popular songs that use the E♭ Bebop Dominant scale.

Chords in E♭ Bebop Dominant

Explore E♭ Bebop Dominant scale piano chords.

E♭ Seventh

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