Nine-note Messiaen mode with symmetric structure and simultaneous minor/major third, creating static, non-functional harmonic color.
Intervals from the tonic that build this scale step by step.
Diatonic chords on each degree of this scale.
Explore scales that share many of the same notes and compare how their tonal center changes the sound.
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Messiaen’s Mode 3 (Mode with sharpened third) is one of Olivier Messiaen’s seven “modes of limited transposition,” first systematically described in his Technique de mon langage musical (1944). This nine-note mode is notable for including both a minor third and a sharpened (major) third, producing a distinctive coloristic tension. Its character is luminous, otherworldly, and harmonically floating, with a strong sense of suspended tonal gravity rather than functional progression.
Mode 3 is built from repeating patterns of whole steps and alternating semitone clusters, forming a nine-note collection before octave repetition. Its symmetry gives it a highly balanced, yet internally complex, structure.
In C: C–D–E♭–E–F♯–G–A♭–B♭–B.
Interval formula: 1–2–♭3–3–♯4–5–♭6–♭7–7
The presence of both ♭3 and 3 (as well as ♭7 and 7) creates internal harmonic ambiguity. Within the context of Messiaen’s modes, the ♯3 functions as a color note that contrasts with the ♭3, allowing the composer or improviser to emphasize shifting harmonic tensions and enrich the vertical sonority.
Messiaen’s Mode 3 is used in coloristic harmonic writing, modern classical composition, and film scoring to create static but richly saturated harmonic textures. Unlike functional harmony, it establishes harmonic “fields” or sound colors rather than directional tension-resolution patterns.
It is especially effective for sustained harmony, where the ♯3 can act as a pivot or highlight within voicings derived from the mode.
Practice Mode 3 as a fixed pitch collection rather than a functional scale. Focus on the interaction between ♭3 and 3, as well as ♭7 and 7, to explore the vertical color contrasts.
For composition, use it as a harmonic environment to evoke suspension and color shifts rather than traditional resolution. For improvisation, emphasize vertical sonorities and timbral contrasts.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | E | |||
| 2 | F♯ | |||
| 3 | G | |||
| 4 | G♯ | |||
| 6 | A♯ | |||
| 7 | B | |||
| 8 | C | |||
| 10 | D | |||
| 11 | D♯ |