Eb

Major Pentatonic Scale

(Originally D#)

Note: D# MinorEb Minor

D# Major contains double sharps (F##, C##) making it impractical to read

Eb Major is the enharmonic equivalent used by musicians. Same pitches, better notation.

Scale Notes

Eb1+0 semitones
F2+2 semitones
G3+4 semitones
Bb4+7 semitones
C5+9 semitones

Scale Information

Root NoteEb
(from D#)
Scale TypeMajor Pentatonic Scale
CategoryPentatonicNumber of Notes5

Interval Pattern

Semitones: 0 - 2 - 4 - 7 - 9
Pattern repeats every octave (12 semitones)
D#0
E1
F2
F#3
G4
G#5
A6
A#7
B8
C9
C#10
D11
← Scroll horizontally to see all notes →
Understanding the Pattern: The numbers above show the interval distances between scale notes in semitones (half-steps). The highlighted notes like this are the notes that belong to this scale. This pattern can be moved to any starting note to create the same scale in different keys - that's how scales work across all 12 keys!

Scale Overview

Description

5-note scale derived from the major scale, very consonant

Musical Context

This pentatonic scale contains 5 notes and is commonly used in Jazz and Saxophone music. This scale requires some musical experience to master effectively.

Characteristics
SimpleConsonantFolk-likeUniversal

Practice Guide

Key Signature

3 flats (Bb, Eb, Ab)

Eb - F - G - Bb - C

Difficulty Level

IntermediateCircle of Fifths

Common in jazz, saxophone music, and wind ensembles

Common Genres

JazzSaxophoneClassicalWind ensemble
Common Uses
Folk music
Country
Rock solos
World music
Practice Tips
  • • Practice ascending and descending patterns
  • • Try different rhythmic variations
  • • Experiment with skipping notes (thirds, fourths)
  • • Use as a basis for improvisation