From Dead Sea Scales: The 5 Missing Notes™ by Christopher Dean
The pentatonic scale is the most universal scale in human music. It appears independently in Chinese, Japanese, African, Celtic, Native American, Indonesian, Indian, and dozens of other traditions. Every culture on Earth converged on the same 5 notes. Why?
The major scale has 7 notes. Two of them — the 4th and 7th degrees — create a tritone (the “Devil’s Interval”). Remove both and you get 5 notes with zero tritone tension. That’s the pentatonic scale. It’s not a discovery — it’s a deletion.
In the Dead Sea Scales framework, these deletions produce three families:
| Type | What’s Deleted | Modes | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hexatonic | 4th degree only | 6 (no Lydian) | 6-note scale, one tritone note removed |
| Guido Hexatonic | 7th degree only | 6 (no Locrian) | Do Re Mi Fa Sol La (1030 CE) |
| Pentatonic | 4th + 7th | 5 (no Lydian, no Locrian) | The universal scale |
| Position | Known As | Traditions |
|---|---|---|
| Ionian (I) | Major Pentatonic | Gong (Chinese), Mohanam (Indian) |
| Dorian (II) | Suspended / Egyptian | Slendro (Indonesian), Shang (Chinese) |
| Phrygian (III) | Man Gong | Jiao (Chinese), Malkauns (Indian) |
| Mixolydian (V) | Yo Scale | Ritusen (Japanese), Zhi (Chinese) |
| Aeolian (VI) | Minor Pentatonic | Yu (Chinese) |
Every one of these is a position within the diatonic system. Man Gong sits at the Phrygian position. The Yo Scale sits at Mixolydian. Minor Pentatonic sits at Aeolian. They’re not separate scales — they’re the diatonic modes with two notes deleted, viewed from different starting points.
The Guido Hexatonic Lydian position has the same 6 notes as the Hexatonic Ionian position (C D E G A B). This crossover is the point where the two hexatonic systems meet — one deletion from above, one from below, same result.
17 Deleted Diatonic modes. 6 hexatonic. 6 Guido hexatonic. 5 pentatonic. Not inventions — recognitions. The alignment was always there. Dead Sea Scales revealed it.
— Christopher Dean, Dead Sea Scales
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