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Music Theory · Scale-Chord Unity

2,048 — The Complete Universe of Scales and Chords

From Dead Sea Scales: The 5 Missing Notes™ by Christopher Dean

There are exactly 2,048 possible combinations of notes in 12-tone equal temperament (2¹¹, with the root always present). This number is the same in every key. It is the complete universe of both melody and harmony.

The Breakdown

# NotesAs a ScaleAs a ChordCount
1RootRoot1
2IntervalDiad / Power chord11
3TrichordTriad (maj, min, dim, aug)55
4Tetrachord7th chord (maj7, min7, dom7)165
5Pentatonic9th chord voicing330
6Hexatonic11th chord voicing462
7Scale / Mode13th chord462
8Octatonic13th + passing tone330
9–12Near-chromaticCluster voicing232
Total2,048

Every Combination Is Both

Play a 7-note mode in sequence = a scale. Stack those same notes in 3rds = a 13th chord. Play a pentatonic melodically = a scale. Stack it = a 9th voicing. Play a triad arpeggiated = a melody. Strum it = the most common chord in music. There are no two separate systems. Scales and chords are one system viewed horizontally and vertically.

256 of 2,048 — And Why That’s 100%

Dead Sea Scales directly documents 256 unique patterns. This covers every historically named scale from every musical tradition (135 tested, zero exceptions), every standard chord quality, plus 23 new voicings from the extended families.

The remaining 1,792 patterns are not musically empty — every one of them is reachable through DSS operations. At the 7-note level, exactly 42 patterns are cluster-free (no three consecutive semitones), and they form exactly 6 families: the four history finished naming plus the Two Orphans. Patterns that do contain clusters mark passing-tone character, not emptiness. 12.5% of the math documented. 100% of the music within reach.

The framework reaches all 2,048 through combinations of operations. The spreadsheet documents the ones that matter. The difference is between a catalog and a system. The encyclopedia says “here are all the scales.” Dead Sea Scales says “here is how they’re all related to one thing you already know.”

— Christopher Dean, Dead Sea Scales

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