A modern ear, accustomed to hearing a half step between the seventh and eighth degrees of the scale, feels a peculiar charm in the fact that the ecclesiastical modes do not use one single definite interval at this place, but use sometimes a whole and sometimes a half step. Likewise the free use of the B-flat for melodic reasons and the raising of the third of certain definite triads, which occurs with equal freedom, produce harmonic variations which sound refreshing and strange.
Every ecclesiastical mode actually has at its disposal many more chordal possibilities than the major and minor scales. If we compare, for example, the Dorian with D minor (the two having almost the ssame scale) we see that the Dorian has two triads (D major and D minor) on the first degree, whereas the D minor scale has only one. On the second degree there are two possibilities available for the ecclesiastical mode, but only one for the D minor scale.
The following illustration shows the resources ordinarily available:
Dorian: i and I, ii and ii(dim), III, IV and iv, V and v, VI and vi(dim), VII and vii(dim)
D minor: i, ii(dim), III, iv, V, VI, vii(dim)
As may be seen, we have in the Dorian no less than six pure triads -- the most valuable tonal combinations -- which deviate from D minor: D major, E minor, F major, G major, A minor, and C major.
In addition to the greater richness which the the particular ecclesiastical modes thus possess within their respective fields, they have the greater number of modes. While modern music only has two modes...
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