Minor Chord Scale Choices
A lead sheet might show “Dm7” three times in one tune, and each time you’re expected to play a different scale over it. That’s not a mistake — it’s the whole game of Chord-Scale Theory: the chord symbol tells you the notes that must sound, but the chord’s function — where it sits in the key — tells you which scale actually fits. Get the function wrong and even a “correct” scale clashes; get it right and a plain minor seventh chord suddenly has a color and a direction.
Same Symbol, Different Function
A Minor Seventh Chord like Dm7 only specifies four notes: D, F, A, C. Everything else — the 2nd, 6th, and the exact color of the line — depends on what that chord is doing. Is it the ii chord pulling toward a V7? The vi chord anchoring a key? Or the tonic itself, floating with no resolution in sight? Each answer points to a different scale, and the difference is audible, not academic — it’s the difference between a bright, forward-leaning line and a dark, settled one.
Mapping Function to Scale
| Function | Scale | Why |
|---|---|---|
| ii in a major key (ii–V–I) | Dorian Mode | natural 6th leads smoothly into V |
| vi in a major key (relative minor) | The Natural Minor Scale (Aeolian) | ♭6 marks it as stable, not forward-pulling |
| iii in a major key (rare) | Phrygian Mode | ♭2 gives the correct dark color, avoids Dorian’s brightness |
| Tonic i, modal/static | Dorian or Aeolian | either works; context and taste decide |
| Tonic i with a 6 or maj7 extension | The Melodic Minor Scale | supplies the natural 6th and natural 7th those chords need |
| V7 in a minor key | The Harmonic Minor Scale (or its derived modes) | the raised 7th is what makes the dominant pull |
| Any minor chord, safe default | Pentatonic Scales / The Blues Scale | sparse note-set sidesteps the tension notes entirely |
The 6th and 7th Degrees Are Doing All the Work
Line up the minor scales and the differences shrink to just two notes. Over D:
- D Dorian: D E F G A B C (natural 6, ♭7)
- D Aeolian: D E F G A B♭ C (♭6, ♭7)
- D Melodic Minor: D E F G A B C♯ (natural 6, natural 7 — for Dm6 or Dm(maj7))
- D Harmonic Minor: D E F G A B♭ C♯ (♭6, raised 7)
- D Minor Pentatonic: D F G A C (no 2nd or 6th at all)
- E Phrygian (over the rarer iii chord, Em7): E F G A B C D (♭2, ♭6, ♭7)
That natural 6th versus flat 6th is the single biggest sound difference in Minor Key Harmony. Dorian’s natural 6 gives the mode a bright, unresolved quality that’s perfect for the forward motion of a major-key ii–V–I or a The Minor ii-V-i, while Aeolian’s ♭6 is exactly what makes a vi chord feel like home rather than a passing stop.
The three D scales, one octave each, laid out by function:
Isolating just the top tetrachord shows where the scales actually diverge — the 6th and 7th degrees:
Tonic Minor Gets the Most Options
When a minor chord is the actual tonic — not resolving to anything — the rules loosen. This is the territory of Modal Jazz: a static Dm7 can sit under Dorian for a whole chorus with nothing “wrong” happening, because there’s no V chord demanding resolution. If that tonic chord is voiced as an m6 or m(maj7) instead of a plain m7, melodic minor becomes the natural source, since it’s the only minor scale with both a natural 6th and a natural 7th built in. In practice, players often blend Dorian and Aeolian freely over a static tonic minor and let the melody decide which color wins in the moment — treating “the scale” as a palette rather than a fixed rule.
When in Doubt, Pentatonic and Blues
The The Blues Scale and minor pentatonic (1–♭3–4–5–♭7) skip the 2nd and 6th degrees entirely, which is exactly why they work over almost any minor chord without sounding wrong — there’s no ♭6 vs. natural 6 argument to have when those notes aren’t in the scale. That’s not a cop-out; it’s real vocabulary, especially in a Minor Blues, where the sparse blues language carries the whole solo. But watch for Avoid Notes once you step outside pentatonic territory — a note that’s gorgeous on the ii chord can be a clam on the vi chord of the very same key.
♫ Listen
- Miles Davis — “So What” (Kind of Blue, 1959): sixteen bars of static Dm7 with nowhere to resolve — pure Dorian tonic minor. Listen to how the natural 6th (B) keeps surfacing in the head and in the solos as the mode’s signature color.
- John Coltrane — “Mr. P.C.” (Giant Steps, 1960): a driving 12-bar minor blues in C minor. Listen to how pentatonic and blues-scale language carries the line without ever needing to distinguish Dorian from Aeolian — the all-purpose minor vocabulary in action.
Related: Dorian Mode, The Melodic Minor Scale, Chord-Scale Theory, Minor Key Harmony