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JolyMusic Theory Lab

Triad Pairs: The Complete JolyMusic Atlas of Hexatonic Color

A deep triad-pair map for improvisers and composers: definitions, no-common-tone pairs, shared-tone pairs, altered-dominant pairs, symmetric pairs, parent scales, practice systems, and playable JolyMusic examples.

Published May 30, 2026, 4:49 AM

A deep triad-pair map for improvisers and composers: definitions, no-common-tone pairs, shared-tone pairs, altered-dominant pairs, symmetric pairs, parent scales, practice systems, and playable JolyMusic examples.

Triad pairs are one of the cleanest ways to turn scale theory into playable music. Instead of running a seven-note scale, you alternate two triads and let the ear hear shape: three-note identity, register contrast, color, and motion. A pair can sound modern without becoming random because each half is still a familiar object under the hands and in the ear.

In strict usage, a triad pair means two triads with no shared pitch classes. Their union creates a six-note collection, usually called a hexatonic collection. In practical JolyMusic usage, we also keep a second category: paired triads with one shared tone. They are not strict six-note pairs, but they are too useful for jazz, modal writing, and composition to ignore.

Definition
A triad pair is a scale with handles
ImproviserHarmony
The scale supplies the pitch world; the two triads supply playable handles. A strong pair gives the player enough structure to sound intentional and enough missing notes to avoid scalar habits.
Strict pairTwo triads, no shared pitch classes, six total tones
Paired triadsTwo triads with one or more shared tones, usually five or four tones
Best useMelody, voicing, upper structures, outside motion
Core questionWhat parent scale does the pair imply?
JolyMusic Tool
Build each pair as a custom keyscale
Create keyscale
PracticeCompositionKeyscale
Use the JolyMusic keyscale editor to enter the six tones of any pair, save the collection, then practice it as a scale, arpeggio source, or chord-color map.
Routekeyscale_new
WorkflowTriads - union tones - parent scale - saved practice map

Master-source orientation

This article is not a transcription of any copyrighted method book. It uses the public-facing trail of four master sources as a map, then builds original JolyMusic examples from the tone, interval, and keyscale models. Gary Campbell frames triad pairs as an alternative to plain chord-scale running; Walt Weiskopf emphasizes long intervallic phrases from only two triads; Jerry Bergonzi places the subject inside the wider hexatonic vocabulary; Nicolas Slonimsky supplies the older symmetry-and-pattern lineage behind many modern sounds.

How the sources shape the workflow
The master sources point to a practical sequence: derive, phrase, hear the six-note field, then sequence it symmetrically when the music asks for that sound.
Source lensWhat to steal conceptuallyJolyMusic translation
CampbellDo not merely name a scale; derive playable triads from it.For every parent keyscale, list the pair, union tones, missing degrees, and chord function.
WeiskopfTwo simple triads can produce a long phrase if rhythm and direction are varied.Use motif cells, direction switches, and register breaks before adding more pitch material.
BergonziHexatonics are not only "triad pairs"; they are six-note harmonic environments.Save each six-note environment as a keyscale and test it against bass roots.
SlonimskySymmetry creates transposable pattern logic.Treat augmented, diminished, and whole-tone pairs as movable pattern engines, not only chord-scale choices.

The three rules

First, name the two triads. Second, name their union as scale degrees from the harmonic root. Third, decide whether the missing note is part of the sound. For example, C major plus D major gives C, D, E, F#, G, A. Over C, that is 1, 2, 3, #4, 5, 6: a C Lydian hexatonic color. The missing B is not an accident. Leaving out the major seventh makes the sound more open and less cadential.

QuestionWhy it mattersExample
Do the triads share a pitch?Decides whether this is strict hexatonic or a shared-tone pairC + D is strict; C + G shares G
What is the root of the sound?The same six notes can imply several functionsC + D over C is Lydian; over D it is Mixolydian-sus color
What note is missing?The omitted degree often defines the openness of the soundC Lydian pair omits 7, softening the tonic
Triad Pair State
two triads - union tones - parent scale - function - omitted degree
sourceTriads: C and Dunion: C D E F# G AscaleDegrees: 1 2 3 #4 5 6parentScale: C LydianomittedDegree: 7

The essential no-common-tone pairs

The strict six-note pairs below are the first atlas. Everything is written from C as the hearing center, but the pair should be practiced in all keys. The same root-distance logic transposes cleanly.

Pair in CUnion tonesDegrees over CAssociated scale or colorBest use
C + DC D E F# G A1 2 3 #4 5 6C Lydian hexatonicMaj7#11, major modal, film color
C + BbC D E F G Bb1 2 3 4 5 b7C Mixolydian hexatonicDominant 7 without avoid-note 6
C + DbC Db E F G Ab1 b2 3 4 5 b6C Phrygian dominant / double-harmonic familySpanish dominant, b9 and b13 color
C + F#C Db E F# G Bb1 b2 3 #4 5 b7C dominant b9 #11 hexatonicAltered dominant with natural 5
C + BC D# E F# G B1 #9 3 #4 5 7C major #9 #11 colorOutside major color, chromatic upper structure
C + DmC D E F G A1 2 3 4 5 6C major hexatonicMajor melody without leading tone
C + BmC D E F# G B1 2 3 #4 5 7C Lydian major-seven hexatonicMaj7#11 with direct leading-tone pull
C + BbmC Db E F G Bb1 b2 3 4 5 b7C Phrygian dominant hexatonicV7b9sus blend, flamenco dominant
Cm + DC D Eb F# G A1 2 b3 #4 5 6C Dorian #4Melodic minor mode color, modern minor
Cm + DmC D Eb F G A1 2 b3 4 5 6C Dorian hexatonicMinor modal, funk, modal jazz
Cm + BbmC Db Eb F G Bb1 b2 b3 4 5 b7C Phrygian hexatonicDark minor without b6 heaviness
Cm + BmC D Eb F# G B1 2 b3 #4 5 7C minor-major #11 colorModern minor tonic, film tension

Not every mathematical pair is equally musical. The table keeps pairs that have a clear parent-scale interpretation or a strong harmonic function. If a pair produces only a cluster with no convincing root, treat it as an outside effect, not as core vocabulary.

C Lydian Triad Pair
Score triad-pair-c-d-lydian.musicxml

The major pair: C plus D

C major plus D major is the cleanest entry point because it produces Lydian color without forcing the major seventh. The C triad gives 1, 3, 5. The D triad gives 2, #4, 6. Those are exactly the stable major color plus the Lydian extensions. This pair works for Cmaj7#11, C6/9#11, C pedal writing, D/C polychord color, and any place where a plain major scale feels too ordinary.

TriadChord tones over CFunction
C major1 3 5Ground, consonance, arrival
D major2 #4 6Lydian extension color
Alternation1 2 3 #4 5 6Open major sound without leading-tone closure
C plus D: four usable phrases
Do not practice the pair only as C-E-G / D-F#-A. Practice concrete line types that solve a musical problem.
Concrete line typeNotesWhat the ear hearsUse it over
Block answerC E G - D F# A - G E D CTwo clean triads, then a stepwise close.Cmaj7#11, C6/9#11
Interlocked ascentC D E F# G A CScale motion, but every note still belongs to a triad handle.C Lydian pedal
Upper-structure descentA F# D - G E C - D CThe color triad releases into the tonic triad.Cmaj7 resolving phrase
Outside-before-insideD F# A C - G E CBright #11 color lands in consonance.Last bar of a modal vamp
Exercise
Make the pair melodic before it becomes technical
StudentPractice
Play C-E-G, answer with D-F#-A, then reverse the direction. Keep one rhythmic cell fixed for two minutes before transposing.
PairC major and D major
Tempo60-84 BPM
RhythmOne cell only
KeysMove by fifths
CheckThe #4 sounds intentional, not accidental

Shared-tone pairs still matter

Shared-tone pairs do not create six different notes, but they create powerful pentatonic and blues-colored vocabulary. These are often more practical on fast tunes because the common tone glues the line together.

Pair in CUnion tonesAssociated scale or chordBest use
C + GC D E G BCmaj9 pentatonicMaj9 lines, open major arpeggios
C + GmC D E G BbC9 pentatonicDominant 9, blues-funk lines
C + EbC Eb E G BbC7#9 pentatonicBlues dominant, split-third color
C + CmC Eb E GMajor-minor tonic cellBlues, gospel, modal mixture
Cm + GmC D Eb G BbC minor 9 pentatonicMinor tonic, modal vamps
Cm + FmC Eb F G AbC minor pentatonic plus b6Aeolian color, cinematic minor
C + AmC E G AC6 / A minor overlapMajor-sixth and relative-minor language
Cm + AbC Eb G AbC minor with b6 anchorNatural minor tonic color

The common mistake is to reject these because they are not strict triad pairs. Do not. They are paired triads, and their shared tone gives phrasing continuity. Use strict pairs when you want a six-note color field; use shared-tone pairs when you want a strong melodic object.

Altered-dominant pairs

Dominant harmony is where triad pairs become especially useful. The player can avoid thinking "all altered notes at once" and instead hold two triad shapes with clear identities. Over C7alt, the parent scale is C altered, which is the seventh mode of Db melodic minor: C, Db, Eb, E, Gb, Ab, Bb. A very strong rootless pair is Db minor plus Eb minor. Db minor gives b9, 3, b13. Eb minor gives #9, b5, b7. Together they cover the altered color without playing the root.

Dominant soundUseful pairTones over CAssociated scaleResolution target
C7altDbm + Ebmb9 3 b13, #9 b5 b7C altered / Db melodic minorF minor, F major, or C tonic color by context
C7b9 #11C + F#1 3 5, b2 #4 b7C dominant b9 #11 hexatonicF or B depending on bass motion
C7#9 #11C + Ebm1 3 5, #9 #11 b7C half-whole diminished subsetF major/minor
C7sus b9C + Bbm1 3 5, b7 b9 4C Phrygian dominant hexatonicF minor, flamenco cadence
C7 whole-toneCaug + Daug1 3 #5, 2 #4 b7C whole toneF, B, or chromatic planing
Progression examples, not isolated licks
Attach each pair to a chord and to a resolution. This prevents the sound from becoming a floating exercise.
ProgressionChordPairExample notesResolution logic
Major ii-V-I in CDm7Dm + EmD F A - E G B - A G E DDorian color omits C until the line needs the seventh.
Major ii-V-I in CG7altAbm + BbmAb Cb Eb - Bb Db F - F EbAltered color aims b7 and b13 downward.
Major ii-V-I in CCmaj7#11C + DE G D - F# A C - B GLydian color can reveal B only at the cadence.
Minor ii-V-i in CDm7b5Fm + GmF Ab C - G Bb D - C AbThe pair states b3, b5, b7 plus 11 and b13.
Minor ii-V-i in CG7altAbm + BbmB Eb Ab - Bb F Db - B AbEnharmonic spelling makes the altered guide tones visible.
Minor ii-V-i in CCm6 or CmMaj7Cm + DC Eb G - D F# A - G Eb CMinor tonic gets lift from 9, #11, and 13.
C Altered Triad Pair
Score triad-pair-c-altered-rootless.musicxml
Score triad-pair-ii-v-i-etude.musicxml

Symmetric pairs

Symmetric pairs are useful when you want a sound that can slide, transpose, or suspend normal function. Augmented and diminished triads are the main tools. They are less diatonic, but they create very clear modern color because the interval structure is repetitive.

PairUnion tonesAssociated scaleUse
Caug + DaugC D E F# G# A#C whole toneDominant whole-tone, dream sequence, planing
Caug + DbaugC Db E F Ab AAugmented-scale fragmentChromatic major-third symmetry
Cdim + DbdimC Db Eb E Gb GOctatonic fragmentDiminished dominant approach
Cdim + DdimC D Eb F Gb AbOctatonic / blues-minor fragmentDark sequence, passing diminished color
Caug + BaugC D# E G G# BChromatic augmented-major fragmentOutside major, film harmony
C Whole-Tone Augmented Pair
Score triad-pair-whole-tone-augmented.musicxml

Scale association table

This is the practical lookup table. The "associated scale" is the safest parent collection for composition and practice. The pair itself may omit one or two notes from that parent scale.

Sound targetTriad pairPair degreesAssociated parent scale
Major #11 openI + II1 2 3 #4 5 6Lydian
Dominant openI + bVII1 2 3 4 5 b7Mixolydian
Major no leading toneI + iim1 2 3 4 5 6Ionian / major hexatonic
Dorian minorim + iim1 2 b3 4 5 6Dorian
Dorian #4im + II1 2 b3 #4 5 6Dorian #4 / melodic-minor family
Phrygian minorim + bVIIm1 b2 b3 4 5 b7Phrygian
Phrygian dominantI + bIIm or I + bII1 b2 3 4 5 b7 or b6Phrygian dominant / double harmonic
Altered dominantbIIm + bIIIm over I7b9 #9 3 b5 b13 b7Altered scale
Half-whole dominantI + bIIIm1 3 5 #9 #11 b7Half-whole diminished
Whole-tone dominantIaug + IIaug1 2 3 #4 #5 b7Whole tone
Major pentatonic colorI + V1 2 3 5 7Major pentatonic / Ionian subset
Dominant pentatonic colorI + vm1 2 3 5 b7Dominant pentatonic / Mixolydian subset
Blues dominantI + bIII1 b3 3 5 b7Blues dominant / C7#9 pentatonic
Minor-nine pentatonicim + vm1 2 b3 5 b7Aeolian / Dorian subset

Rhythm makes the pair speak

The pair should not always alternate as block triplets. Rhythm decides whether it sounds like a lick, a polychord, a sequence, or a phrase. One strong practice method is to keep the triads fixed and rotate the accent pattern. The circular preview below models that idea: one ring marks the first triad, the second ring answers with the second triad, and the offset makes the alternation feel like phrase motion instead of a worksheet.

Triad pair accent rotation
3 ring(s)

How to practice every pair

  1. Block: play triad A, then triad B, both ascending and descending.
  2. Interlock: alternate one note from each triad: C, D, E, F#, G, A for the C plus D pair.
  3. Invert: start from every inversion of both triads.
  4. Sequence: move the pair through all keys by fifths, then by half step.
  5. Harmonize: hold the bass root and play both triads as upper structures.
  6. Resolve: for every outside pair, write the resolution note before you write the line.
Instrument-specific drills
The same pair has different technical risks on different instruments. Keep the musical pass condition explicit.
InstrumentConcrete drillConstraintPass condition
PianoLeft hand holds C and G; right hand alternates C major and D major in three inversions.Do not use pedal for the first pass.The #11 is audible without blurring the tonic.
GuitarPlay C major on strings 4-3-2, then D major on the same string set; repeat on 3-2-1.Keep the top voice moving by step or third.No position jump sounds accidental.
HornSing the root of the chord, then play only the two triads without the root.Breathe after a phrase, not after each triad.The line still implies the harmony when unaccompanied.
BassPedal the root on beat 1; answer with two triad tones on beats 2 and 3.Never abandon time feel for interval display.The groove remains stronger than the pattern.
ComposerWrite a two-bar melody using only pair tones, then add one missing parent-scale tone in bar 3.The added tone must sound like a reveal.The listener hears form, not just a collection.
Rhythm cells that stop the pair sounding academic
Keep the pitches fixed and vary only rhythm/direction. That is where the vocabulary becomes language.
Rhythmic cellC + D realizationEffectWhen to use
3+3+2 eighthsC E G / D F# A / G EClear triads with a phrase kick at the end.Modal vamps and fusion lines.
One-note alternationC D E F# G A F# ESounds scalar while preserving pair logic.Fast tempos where arpeggios feel too square.
Direction flipC E G / A F# D / E G CThe second triad answers in contrary motion.Call-response phrasing.
Delayed resolutionD F# A C / F# A D / G E CUpper color arrives before the stable triad.Cadence preparation.
Practice Ladder
Do not learn pairs as finger patterns only
StudentAll Keys
A pair is learned when you can sing both triads, name the parent scale, place it over a chord, and resolve it into the next harmony without guessing.
Step 1Sing triad A and triad B
Step 2Name union degrees
Step 3Attach parent scale
Step 4Play over bass root
Step 5Resolve into a tune

Composition workflow

For composition, start from function rather than from shape. If the harmony is a calm major tonic, use I plus II or I plus V. If the harmony is a dominant that needs bite, use altered, half-whole, or whole-tone pairs. If the harmony is a minor vamp, use im plus iim for Dorian, im plus II for Dorian #4, or im plus bVIIm for Phrygian. Then decide whether the missing parent-scale note should appear later as a reveal.

Composition problemPair choiceWhy it works
Major chord sounds too plainI + IIAdds 2, #4, and 6 without crowding the tonic triad
Dominant chord needs modern pressurebIIm + bIIIm over the dominant rootGives altered notes as two playable minor triads
Minor vamp needs liftim + iimDorian color keeps the natural 6 alive
Cadence needs a surreal dominantIaug + IIaugWhole-tone symmetry removes normal leading behavior
Blues line needs more harmonyI + bIIIMajor and minor thirds coexist as a controlled split-third sound
JolyMusic Rule
The pair is not the music yet
ComposerWorkflow
Use the pair to generate options, then edit by melody, register, rhythm, and resolution. If the result does not sing, simplify the pair before adding more theory.
GenerateChoose pair and parent scale
CurateKeep only phrase shapes that sing
ResolveAim outside colors into a target
ArchiveSave useful pairs as keyscales

The deep value of triad pairs is that they connect theory to action. A scale becomes two objects. A chord color becomes a physical grip. An outside sound becomes a targetable path back inside. Learn the atlas, but do not stop there: pick one pair, attach it to one harmonic function, write one phrase with it, then resolve it so clearly that the listener hears intention before they hear theory.

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