Learn music theory with Sonid
  • For teachers & schools

    Sonid logo

    Learn music theory with Sonid

    Learn music theory with practical tools, guided app exercises, and a complete reference for chords, scales, notes, intervals, and modes.

    Product

    Use cases

    • For beginners
    • For guitarists
    • For pianists
    • Ear training
    • Theory practice

    Solutions

    • For teachers & schools

    Learn

    Theory

    • Intervals
    • Interval playlists
    • Chords
    • Scales
    • Terms
    • Notes reference

    Tools

    • Music Theory Playground
    • Metronome
    • Why and how to play with a metronome
    • Tuner

    Community

    • Blog
    • Basics
    • Ear training
    • About us

    Get the app

    App StoreGoogle Play

    About

    Created byMartijn van der Eijk
    Written byLida van der Eijk
    Vectors byFreepik

    Legal

    PrivacyTerms of UsePress

    Socials

    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.
    YoutubeFacebook
    @copyright Martijn van der Eijk 2026
    1. Home
    2. Scale Library
    3. C
    4. Altered

    C Altered

    Dominant mode with ♭9/♯9/♭5/♯5, the 7th mode of melodic minor.

    super locriandiminished whole tonepomeroy

    Which intervals and notes are in the C Altered scale?

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

    Which chords can you play on the C Altered scale?

    Diatonic chords on each degree of this scale.

    To which mode does C Altered belong?

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

    Related scales for C Altered

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

    Practice the altered scale

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    Guitar diagrams

    Piano diagrams

    Sheet music

    Practice the altered scale

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    DegreeTriadSeventhExtendedScale
    I
    C
    m
    C
    m/ma7
    C
    mM9
    C Melodic minor
    II
    C
    m7
    C Dorian ♭2
    III
    C
    maj7♯5
    C Lydian Augmented
    IV
    C
    M
    C
    7
    C Lydian Dominant
    V
    C
    M
    C
    7♭13
    VI
    VII

    The altered scale (also called super locrian) is the densest dominant color in the melodic minor system. It concentrates multiple altered tensions on one dominant center and creates maximum pull toward resolution. In modal terms, it is the 7th mode of melodic minor.

    Construction and formula

    In dominant language, the formula is 1-♭9-♯9-3-♭5-♯5-♭7, equivalent to the modal spelling 1-♭2-♭3-♭4-♭5-♭6-♭7. In C altered, the notes are C-D♭-E♭-E-G♭-A♭-B♭. The parent scale is D♭ melodic minor.

    The core sound comes from combining 3 and ♭7 with simultaneous altered extensions. That structure makes it one of the strongest pre-resolution dominant colors.

    Musical usage

    The altered scale is mainly used over V7alt chords, especially before i or I in jazz cadences. It is ideal when you want dense chromatic tension and clear directional release.

    Melodically, lines are strongest when chord tones are targeted and surrounded by altered neighbors. Harmonically, 3 and ♭7 plus one or two altered tensions often define the sound immediately.

    Examples

    • V7alt lines in minor ii-V-i progressions.
    • Dominant reharmonization with maximum altered color.
    • Fusion and modern jazz phrases with compact chromatic tension.
    Comparative studies between Mixolydian, Lydian Dominant, and altered.

    In practice

    Start by practicing dominant guide tones (3 and ♭7), then add ♭9, ♯9, ♭5, and ♯5 gradually. This keeps function clear while helping you control altered color.

    For improvisation, clear target-tone resolution matters more than running scale shapes. For composition, use altered as a peak-tension dominant sound before a strong release.

    C Mixolydian flat sixth
    C
    m7♭5
    C Locrian ♯2
    C
    dim
    C
    m7♭5
    C
    7♯9♭13
    C Altered
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    Perfect unison0C
    Minor second1D♭
    Augmented second3D♯
    Major third4E
    Augmented fourth6F♯
    Minor sixth8A♭
    Minor seventh10B♭
    NameAliasesDifficulty
    C Augmentedaug, +, +5, ^#5Beginner
    C Altered seventhalt7Easy
    C Diminisheddim, °, oEasy
    C Minor seventh flat fifthm7b5, ø, -7b5, h7, hEasy
    C Dominant seventh no fifth7no5Intermediate
    m#5, -#5, m+Intermediate
    7b13Intermediate
    +add#9Expert
    7#5#9, 7#9#5, 7altExpert
    7#5b9, 7b9#5Expert
    7b5Expert
    m7#5Expert
    7#5, +7, 7+, 7aug, aug7Guru
    7#5b9#11Guru
    Mb5Guru
    mb6b9Guru
    C Minor sharp fifth
    C Dominant seventh flat thirteenth
    C Augmented add sharp ninth
    C Dominant seventh sharp fifth sharp ninth
    C Dominant seventh sharp fifth flat ninth
    C Dominant seventh flat fifth
    C Minor seventh sharp fifth
    C Dominant seventh sharp fifth
    C Dominant seventh sharp fifth flat ninth sharp eleventh
    C Major flat fifth
    C Minor flat sixth flat ninth
    NameAliasesDifficulty
    C Whole tone pentatonic-Easy
    C Super locrian pentatonic-Guru
    C Mystery sharp first-Guru