The Musical Scale Finder is a comprehensive reference and calculation tool that identifies the notes, intervals, degrees, and modal characteristics of any musical scale based on a root note, scale type, and mode selection. A musical scale is an ordered sequence of pitches within one octave that forms the harmonic and melodic backbone of a piece of music. Western music uses dozens of distinct scale types, each defined by a specific pattern of whole steps (W, equivalent to 2 semitones) and half steps (H, 1 semitone) between consecutive notes. The most foundational scales are the major scale (W-W-H-W-W-W-H) and the natural minor scale (W-H-W-W-H-W-W). From the major scale, seven modes are derived by starting on each successive scale degree: Ionian (the major scale itself), Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian (natural minor), and Locrian. Beyond these, jazz and world music use a rich palette including the melodic minor scale, harmonic minor, diminished scale, whole tone scale, pentatonic major and minor, blues scale, chromatic scale, bebop scales, and non-Western scales such as the Hungarian minor, Phrygian dominant, and double harmonic. Each scale has a characteristic emotional quality — Ionian sounds bright and resolved, Aeolian sounds melancholic, Dorian has a cool jazzy minor feel, Lydian sounds dreamy and ethereal, and Mixolydian has a bluesy dominant feel. Understanding which notes belong to a given scale, their interval names, and their scale degree functions (tonic, supertonic, mediant, subdominant, dominant, submediant, leading tone) is foundational to composition, improvisation, and harmonic analysis. This calculator displays all this information for any root note and scale type.
Scale Notes: Start with root, apply interval pattern (W/H steps) W = 2 semitones, H = 1 semitone Degree Frequency = Root × 2^(semitone_offset/12) Mode: Start the parent scale pattern from the Nth degree
- 1Step 1: Select a root note (e.g., G).
- 2Step 2: Select a scale type (e.g., Dorian).
- 3Step 3: Apply the scale's interval pattern starting from the root.
- 4Step 4: Name each resulting note, choosing enharmonic spellings based on the scale's key signature.
- 5Step 5: Assign scale degree names (1=Tonic, 2=Supertonic, 3=Mediant, 4=Subdominant, 5=Dominant, 6=Submediant, 7=Leading Tone/Subtonic).
- 6Step 6: Identify characteristic chords (I, ii, iii, IV, V, vi, vii°) diatonic to the scale.
- 7Step 7: Calculate frequencies for each note using equal temperament.
Pattern W-W-H-W-W-W-H: G(2)A(2)B(1)C(2)D(2)E(2)F#(1)G. One sharp (F#). Diatonic chords: G, Am, Bm, C, D, Em, F#dim.
Pattern W-H-W-W-H-W-W. A minor is the relative minor of C major and shares its key signature (no sharps or flats). Diatonic chords: Am, Bdim, C, Dm, Em, F, G.
Dorian is a minor mode with a raised 6th degree. D Dorian = C major scale starting from D. The B natural (raised 6th) distinguishes it from D natural minor (which has Bb). Used extensively in jazz (Miles Davis 'So What'), folk, and rock.
Lydian has a raised 4th degree (E natural instead of Eb in Bb major). This tritone above the root gives Lydian its dreamy, floating quality. Used frequently in film scores (John Williams, Joe Satriani's guitar work).
The blues scale adds the flat fifth (tritone/blue note) to the minor pentatonic: intervals 1-b3-4-b5-5-b7. The Gb (blue note) creates the characteristic blues tension and expressiveness.
Improvisation and soloing in jazz, rock, and classical contexts, representing an important application area for the Scale Finder in professional and analytical contexts where accurate scale finder calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Composition and songwriting — choosing scales that convey the intended mood, representing an important application area for the Scale Finder in professional and analytical contexts where accurate scale finder calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Music education — teaching scale theory to students, representing an important application area for the Scale Finder in professional and analytical contexts where accurate scale finder calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
DAW plugin configuration — setting up scale-locked MIDI plugins, representing an important application area for the Scale Finder in professional and analytical contexts where accurate scale finder calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Analysis of existing music to identify scale and modal usage, representing an important application area for the Scale Finder in professional and analytical contexts where accurate scale finder calculations directly support informed decision-making, strategic planning, and performance optimization
Enharmonic Scales
In the Scale Finder, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting scale finder results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when scale finder calculations fall into non-standard territory.
Symmetrical Scales
In the Scale Finder, this scenario requires additional caution when interpreting scale finder results. The standard formula may not fully account for all factors present in this edge case, and supplementary analysis or expert consultation may be warranted. Professional best practice involves documenting assumptions, running sensitivity analyses, and cross-referencing results with alternative methods when scale finder calculations fall into non-standard territory.
When using the Scale Finder for comparative scale finder analysis across
When using the Scale Finder for comparative scale finder analysis across scenarios, consistent input measurement methodology is essential. Variations in how scale finder inputs are measured, estimated, or rounded introduce systematic biases compounding through the calculation. For meaningful scale finder comparisons, establish standardized measurement protocols, document assumptions, and consider whether result differences reflect genuine variations or measurement artifacts. Cross-validation against independent data sources strengthens confidence in comparative findings.
| Mode | Interval Pattern | Character | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ionian (Major) | W W H W W W H | Bright, resolved | Pop, classical, folk |
| Dorian | W H W W W H W | Cool minor, jazzy | Jazz, funk, rock (minor) |
| Phrygian | H W W W H W W | Dark, Spanish, exotic | Flamenco, metal, jazz |
| Lydian | W W W H W W H | Dreamy, ethereal | Film scores, jazz, prog rock |
| Mixolydian | W W H W W H W | Bluesy, dominant | Blues, rock, country, folk |
| Aeolian (Nat. Minor) | W H W W H W W | Melancholic, dark | Pop, rock, classical minor |
| Locrian | H W W H W W W | Very dark, unstable | Rare — metal, avant-garde |
| Harmonic Minor | W H W W H A H (A=3) | Exotic, classical minor | Classical, flamenco, metal |
| Melodic Minor (asc) | W H W W W W H | Smooth minor | Jazz, classical |
| Major Pentatonic | W W (WH) W (WH) | Open, folk, country | Country, folk, pop |
| Minor Pentatonic | (WH) W W (WH) W | Bluesy, rock | Rock, blues, pop |
| Blues | (WH) W H H W (WH) | Soulful, expressive | Blues, rock, jazz, R&B |
What is the difference between a scale and a mode?
Technically, a mode is a type of scale. The seven modes (Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian, Locrian) are all derived from the major scale pattern by starting on different scale degrees. Ionian is simply the major scale starting from degree 1. Aeolian is the natural minor scale starting from degree 6. In practical music use, modes are treated as scales with their own distinct emotional characters, not just rotations of the major scale. Modern usage often refers to any non-major, non-minor scale as a 'mode.'
Why do some scales have sharps and others have flats?
The choice of sharps vs. flats for accidentals in a scale follows music theory convention: each scale degree must be on a distinct letter name (you can't have two A's or skip a letter). This means the same pitch may be called C# in one scale and Db in another depending on context. G major uses F# because the scale needs F and G as distinct degrees. Db major uses flats because Db major needs the 7th degree to be C# — but wait, it also needs C as the 2nd degree, so it uses Cb instead of B. These conventions preserve the readability of standard notation.
What is the pentatonic scale and why is it so universally popular?
The pentatonic scale uses only 5 notes per octave (instead of 7 for diatonic scales), omitting the two most tension-creating intervals — the minor 2nd and the tritone. This leaves only consonant intervals between scale members, making it nearly impossible to play a 'wrong' note when improvising. The major pentatonic (C-D-E-G-A) and minor pentatonic (A-C-D-E-G) are found in virtually every musical culture worldwide, from Chinese traditional music to West African folk music to American blues and rock. Guitar soloists, especially in rock and blues, default to the pentatonic for its universal applicability.
What is the harmonic minor scale and when is it used?
The harmonic minor scale is a natural minor scale with a raised 7th degree (major 7th instead of minor 7th). This creates a leading tone one semitone below the tonic, which strongly pulls toward resolution — the defining feature of the V7-i progression in minor keys. The raised 7th also creates an augmented second (3 semitones) between the 6th and 7th degrees, giving the harmonic minor its distinctive exotic, Eastern-sounding quality. It is commonly used in classical music, flamenco, metal, and Middle Eastern-influenced genres.
What is the whole tone scale?
The whole tone scale is a six-note scale built entirely from whole steps (2 semitones each): C-D-E-F#-G#-A#-C. Because all intervals are equal, the scale has no tonal center — any note could serve as the root. This creates a floating, ambiguous, dreamlike sound with no sense of resolution. There are only two distinct whole tone scales (the other is Db-Eb-F-G-A-B-Db). Debussy, Ravel, and other Impressionist composers used the whole tone scale extensively. In jazz, it is often played over augmented chords.
How do I know which scale to use when improvising?
The fundamental rule is to match the scale to the chord progression. Over a major chord, use major scale, Lydian, or major pentatonic. Over a minor chord, use natural minor, Dorian, or minor pentatonic. Over a dominant 7th chord (V7), use Mixolydian or blues scale. Over a diminished chord, use the diminished scale. Modal jazz (post-Miles Davis 'Kind of Blue') uses modal scales over static or slowly changing harmony — a D minor chord held for 16 bars invites Dorian or Aeolian exploration. The blues scale works over nearly any chord progression in blues and rock contexts.
What is a relative major/minor pair?
Every major scale has a relative minor scale that shares the same notes (and thus the same key signature). The relative minor starts on the 6th degree of the major scale. C major's relative minor is A minor (both have no sharps or flats). G major's relative minor is E minor (both have F#). This relationship means a guitarist can use the same pentatonic scale shapes for both the major and relative minor keys — playing an A minor pentatonic shape also works over C major, just with a different note as the tonal center.
What is the circle of fifths?
The circle of fifths is a visual arrangement of all 12 major and minor keys in order of their key signatures, moving by perfect fifths (7 semitones) clockwise. Starting at C (no sharps or flats) and moving clockwise: G (1 sharp), D (2 sharps), A (3 sharps)... Moving counterclockwise from C: F (1 flat), Bb (2 flats), Eb (3 flats)... Enharmonic keys (like C# major = Db major) meet at the bottom. The circle of fifths is the single most important reference diagram in Western music theory, showing key relationships, chord progressions, and modulation pathways.
Pro Tip
Learn each mode by its most characteristic interval — Lydian is the raised 4th (#4), Mixolydian is the lowered 7th (b7), Dorian is the raised 6th (natural 6 in a minor context), Phrygian is the lowered 2nd (b2), and Locrian is both the b2 and b5.
Did you know?
The Beatles' 'Eleanor Rigby' uses only the natural minor scale (Aeolian mode) and yet its four-note descending violin motif is one of the most recognizable string arrangements in pop music history. Paul McCartney claimed he did not know formal music theory at the time, demonstrating that intuitive use of scales can produce sophisticated results.