Jeff B. answered 07/02/23
Guitar, Piano, Violin, Saxophone, Flute, Mandolin, & Bass Lessons
There are four minor scales.
All four of them contain the same pentachord formula on the bottom:
R 2 b3 4 5
The difference is in the permutations of the 6th and 7th degrees.
The 6ths and 7ths can either be natural or flat.
In common practice, the composer or arranger can choose relatively freely the qualities of those respective scale degrees.
Berklee terms this family of four minor scales "The Composite Minor".
One common example is a minor piece that remains in the natural Aeolian throughout, except when it comes time to effect a strong cadence at which point the 7th degree is raised to become the leading a half-step below the tonic root.
Another instance is the fluidity of Aeolian vs Dorian in "Stairway to Heaven". It's in one version of A composite minor:
When the underlying current chord is an F major it is Aeolian, yet when they underlying chord is D major it is in Dorian.
Characteristics of the composite minor famly:
Aeolian = b6 / b7
Dorian = nat6 / b7
Jazz minor = nat6 / nat7
Harmonic minor = b6 / nat 7