Early examples Joseph Schillinger suggests that the scale was formulated already by
Persian traditional music in the 7th century AD, where it was called "Zar ef Kend", meaning "string of pearls", the idea being that the two different sizes of intervals were like two different sizes of pearls. Octatonic scales first occurred in Western music as byproducts of a series of minor-third transpositions. While
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov claimed he was conscious of the octatonic collection "as a cohesive frame of reference" in his autobiography
My Musical Life, instances can be found in music of previous centuries. Eytan Agmon locates one in
Domenico Scarlatti's Sonata K. 319. In the following passage, according to
Richard Taruskin, "its descending whole-step/half-step bass progression is complete and continuous". Taruskin also cites the following bars from
J. S. Bach's
English Suite No. 3 as octatonic:
Honoré Langlé's 1797 harmony treatise contains a sequential progression with a descending octatonic bass, supporting harmonies that use all and only the notes of an octatonic scale.
19th century In 1800, Beethoven composed his
Piano Sonata No. 11 in B, Op. 22. The slow movement of this work contains a passage of what was, for its time, highly dissonant harmony. In a lecture (2005), pianist
András Schiff describes the harmony of this passage as "really extraordinary". The chord progressions at the beginning of the second and third bars of this passage are octatonic: Octatonic scales can be found in
Chopin's
Mazurka, Op. 50, No. 3 and in several Liszt piano works: the closing measures of the third
Étude de Concert, "Un Sospiro," for example, where (mm. 66–70) the bass contains a complete falling octatonic scale from D to D, in the opening piano
cadenzas of
Totentanz, in the lower notes between the alternating hands, and in the
First Mephisto Waltz, in which a short cadenza (m. 525) makes use of it by harmonizing it with a B
diminished seventh chord. Later in the 19th century, the notes in the chords of the coronation bells from the opening scene of
Modest Mussorgsky's opera
Boris Godunov, which consist of "two dominant seventh chords with roots a
tritone apart" according to Taruskin, are entirely derived from an octatonic scale. Taruskin continues: "Thanks to the reinforcement the lesson has received in some equally famous pieces like
Scheherazade, the progression is often thought of as being peculiarly Russian."
Tchaikovsky was also influenced by the harmonic and coloristic potential of octatonicism. As Mark DeVoto points out, the cascading arpeggios played on the celesta in the "Sugar Plum Fairy" from
The Nutcracker ballet are made up of dominant seventh chords a minor third apart. "Hagens Watch", one of the darkest and most sinister scenes in
Richard Wagner's opera
Götterdämmerung features chromatic harmonies using eleven of the twelve chromatic notes, within which the eight notes of the octatonic scale may be found in bars 9–10 below:
Late 19th and 20th century {{Image frame|content= { \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"english horn" \relative c' { \set Score.currentBarNumber = #5 \key d\major \time 4/4 \tempo Modéré \override DynamicLineSpanner.staff-padding = #2 r4 r8 \tuplet 3/2 { cis!16\p\ e2 d4\! cis4 b b2~ b1 } } |width=425|caption=The cor anglais melody from "Nuages", the first movement of
Debussy's
Nocturnes, bars 5–8. Link to passage}} in Schubert's Symphony No. 8 in B minor (1822), 1st mvt., bars 13–20; flat fifth marked with asterisk The scale is also found in the music of
Claude Debussy and
Maurice Ravel. Melodic phrases that move by alternating tones and semitones frequently appear in the works of both these composers.
Allen Forte identifies a five-note segment in the
cor anglais melody heard near the start of Debussy's "Nuages" from his orchestral suite
Nocturnes as octatonic. Mark DeVoto describes "Nuages" as "arguably [Debussy's] boldest single leap into the musical unknown. 'Nuages' defines a kind of tonality never heard before, based on the centricity of a diminished tonic triad (B-D-F natural)." According to Stephen Walsh, the
cor anglais theme "hangs in the texture like some motionless object, always the same and always at the same pitch". The scale was extensively used by
Rimsky-Korsakov's student
Igor Stravinsky, particularly in his Russian-period works such as
Petrushka (1911),
The Rite of Spring (1913), up to the
Symphonies of Wind Instruments (1920). Passages using this scale are unmistakable as early as the
Scherzo fantastique,
Fireworks (both from 1908), and
The Firebird (1910). It also appears in later works by Stravinsky, such as the
Symphony of Psalms (1930), the
Symphony in Three Movements (1945), most of the neoclassical works from the
Octet (1923) to
Agon (1957), and even in some of the later
serial compositions such as the
Canticum Sacrum (1955) and
Threni (1958). In fact, "few if any composers have been known to employ relations available to the collection as extensively or in as varied a manner as Stravinsky". The second movement of Stravinsky's Octet for wind instruments opens with what Stephen Walsh calls "a broad melody completely in the octatonic scale". Jonathan Cross describes a highly rhythmic passage in the first movement of the
Symphony in Three Movements as "gloriously octatonic, not an unfamiliar situation in jazz, where this mode is known as the 'diminished scale', but Stravinsky of course knew it from Rimsky. The '
rumba' passage... alternates chords of E-flat7 and C7, over and over, distantly recalling the coronation scene from Mussorgsky's
Boris Godunov. In celebrating America, the émigré looked back once again to Russia." Van den Toorn catalogues many other octatonic moments in Stravinsky's music. The scale also may be found in music of
Alexander Scriabin and
Béla Bartók. In Bartók's
Bagatelles,
Fourth Quartet,
Cantata Profana, and
Improvisations, the octatonic is used with the diatonic, whole tone, and other "abstract pitch formations" all "entwined... in a very complex mixture".
Mikrokosmos Nos. 99, 101, and 109 are octatonic pieces, as is No. 33 of the
44 Duos for Two Violins. "In each piece, changes of motive and phrase correspond to changes from one of the three octatonic scales to another, and one can easily select a single central and referential form of 8–28 in the context of each complete piece." However, even his larger pieces also feature "sections that are intelligible as 'octatonic music.
Olivier Messiaen made frequent use of the octatonic scale throughout his career as a composer, and indeed in his seven
modes of limited transposition, the octatonic scale is Mode 2. Peter Hill writes in detail about "La Colombe" (The Dove), the first of a set of
Preludes for piano that Messiaen completed in 1929, at the age of 20. Hill speaks of a characteristic "merging of tonality (E major) with the octatonic mode" in this short piece. Other twentieth-century composers who used octatonic collections include
Samuel Barber,
Ernest Bloch,
Benjamin Britten,
Julian Cochran,
George Crumb,
Irving Fine,
Ross Lee Finney,
Alberto Ginastera,
John Harbison,
Jacques Hétu,
Aram Khachaturian,
Witold Lutosławski,
Darius Milhaud,
Henri Dutilleux,
Robert Morris,
Carl Orff,
Jean Papineau-Couture,
Krzysztof Penderecki,
Francis Poulenc,
Sergei Prokofiev,
Alexander Scriabin,
Dmitri Shostakovich,
Toru Takemitsu,
Joan Tower,
Robert Xavier Rodriguez,
John Williams and
Frank Zappa. Other composers include
Willem Pijper, who may have inferred the collection from Stravinsky's
The Rite of Spring, which he greatly admired, and composed at least one piece—his Piano Sonatina No. 2—entirely in the octatonic system. In the 1920s,
Heinrich Schenker criticized the use of the octatonic scale, specifically Stravinsky's
Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments, for the oblique relation between the diatonic scale and the harmonic and melodic surface.
Jazz Both the half-whole diminished and its partner mode, the whole-half diminished (with a tone rather than a semitone beginning the pattern) are commonly used in jazz improvisation, frequently under different names. The whole-half diminished scale is commonly used in conjunction with diminished harmony (e.g., the Edim7 chord) while the half-whole scale is used in dominant harmony (e.g., with an F9 chord). Examples of octatonic jazz include Jaco Pastorius' composition "Opus Pocus" from the album
Pastorius and
Herbie Hancock's piano solo on "Freedom Jazz Dance" from the album
Miles Smiles (1967). The
John McLaughlin (musician) composition "The Dance of Maya" is structured around modes of the octatonic scale
Rock and pop Jonny Greenwood of the English rock group
Radiohead uses the octatonic scale extensively, such as in the song "
Just" and his soundtrack for the film
The Power of the Dog. He said "It's a slightly more grownup version of the pentatonic scales that we're all taught to do with xylophones and glockenspiels when you're a kid. It's not a major scale or a minor scale; it's something else. But all the notes work together and make a certain color that is its own thing." The scale is used in progressive
heavy metal music such as that by
Dream Theater and
Opeth, both of which strive for a dissonant and tonally ambiguous sound in their music. Examples include the instrumental break in Dream Theater's
Octavarium and Opeth's
Deliverance. Earlier examples of the scale's use in
progressive rock include
King Crimson's Red and
Emerson Lake & Palmer's The Barbarian. Progressive keyboardist
Derek Sherinian is also closely associated with the octatonic scale, which can be found in most of his works, both solo and as part of a band. Examples include
Planet X's Desert Girl and
Sons of Apollo's King of Delusion. The dissonances associated with the scale when used in conjunction with conventional tonality form an integral part of his signature sound which has influenced hundreds of keyboardists of the 21st century. ==Harmonic implications==