Incornsyucopia23 wrote:Lydian-dominant, Melodic-dominant, Whole-tone, Harmonic-dominant, Symmetrical-dominant, Altered-dominant... isn't there one more that I'm forgetting?
Here's an example of how jazz nomenclature is by no mean universally standardized, as I know some of these by different names.
Lydian-dominant = same (or Lydian b7, 4th mode Melodic Minor)
Melodic-dominant = Mixolydian b6 (or 5th mode Melodic Minor)
Whole-tone = same
Harmonic-dominant = 5th mode Harmonic Minor
Symmetrical-dominant = Half-Whole Diminished
Altered-Dominant = same (or Super Locrian, Diminished Whole-Tone)
Besides pentatonic and blues scales (and vanilla Mixolydian of course) that's about it unless you want to get into synthetic scales (3rd and 5th modes of Harmonic Major).
Regarding:
crumhorn wrote:Dominant denotes the 5th degree of the scale no matter what scale.
This:
Incornsyucopia23 wrote:Well, I'd disagree that dominant always means "the 5th degree of the scale."
Remember that in jazz/pop harmony "dominant" really denotes a seventh chord with a major third and minor seventh above all. "Vanilla" Mixolydian (5th mode Major Scale) gives you the most basic, unaltered pitch collection to use with such a chord. But the altered forms (dominant seventh chords with altered extensions like b9, #9, b5, b13, #11) are either derived from different scales or at least share their pitch content with certain other scale (the ones written above plus some others, see the link I gave earlier) that can be used with them.