Escala de Fa Ultralocria para Guitar
Escala de Guitar en afinación 7-string — diagrama de diapasón
Fa Ultralocria en 7-string — Notas e Intervalos
La escala Ultralocria de F es una escala extremadamente oscura y condensada utilizada para crear intensa tension cromatica. En Guitar, sus notas son F, Gb, Ab, A, B, Db, D. Se emplea en jazz de vanguardia y musica ambiental oscura para explorar los limites mas disonantes de la tonalidad menor. Usada comunmente en Avant-Garde, Dark Ambient, Experimental Jazz. Entre los interpretes destacados se encuentran John Zorn, Derek Bailey. Use over dim7 chords in avant-garde contexts. More of a compositional tool than an improvisational one.
Notas: Fa, Solb, Lab, La, Si, Reb, Re
Intervalos: 1P, 2m, 3m, 4d, 5d, 6m, 7d
Grados: 1 b2 b3 4 5 b6 7
Fórmula: H-W-H-W-W-H-WH
Número de notas: 7
Afinación: 7-string (B-E-A-D-G-B-E)
También conocido como: superlocrian bb7, superlocrian diminished
Acerca de la Afinación 7-string
The 7-string guitar adds a low B string below the standard 6-string tuning (B-E-A-D-G-B-E), extending the instrument's range into bass territory. This extra low end has become essential in progressive metal, djent, and modern heavy music, enabling crushing low-end riffs while maintaining access to standard guitar voicings on the upper strings.
Pioneered by jazz guitarist George Van Eps and later brought into the metal mainstream by Steve Vai and Korn, the 7-string guitar has become a staple of modern heavy music. Players like Tosin Abasi, Misha Mansoor, and John Petrucci have pushed the instrument's capabilities into new territory, using the extended range for complex harmonic progressions, polyrhythmic riffs, and sweeping arpeggios that span an enormous tonal range.
Artistas destacados: Dream Theater, Periphery, Animals as Leaders, Korn, Meshuggah
Ideal para: Progressive metal riffs, extended-range chord voicings, djent rhythms, and jazz fusion harmony
Carácter Musical
The darkest mode of the harmonic minor — so dark it has a diminished 4th (bb7), making it almost chromatic. Used to push dissonance to its absolute limit.