Ab

Major Blues Scale

(Originally G#)

Note: G# MinorAb Minor

G# Major contains double sharps (F##) and is not on the Circle of Fifths

Ab Major is the standard key with 4 flats, commonly used in classical and jazz music.

Scale Notes

Ab1+0 semitones
Bb2+2 semitones
Cb3+3 semitones
C4+4 semitones
Eb5+7 semitones
F6+9 semitones

Scale Information

Root NoteAb
(from G#)
Scale TypeMajor Blues Scale
CategoryBluesNumber of Notes6

Interval Pattern

Semitones: 0 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 7 - 9
Pattern repeats every octave (12 semitones)
G#0
A1
A#2
B3
C4
C#5
D6
D#7
E8
F9
F#10
G11
← 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

Major pentatonic with added flat 3rd (blue note)

Musical Context

This blues scale contains 6 notes and is commonly used in Classical and Piano music. This scale requires some musical experience to master effectively.

Characteristics
BluesyMajor tonalityCountry-likeTwangy

Practice Guide

Key Signature

4 flats (Bb, Eb, Ab, Db)

Ab - Bb - Cb - C - Eb - F

Difficulty Level

IntermediateCircle of Fifths

Popular in classical piano music and jazz

Common Genres

ClassicalPianoJazzRomantic era
Common Uses
Country
Blues
Rock
Americana
Practice Tips
  • • Practice ascending and descending patterns
  • • Try different rhythmic variations
  • • Experiment with skipping notes (thirds, fourths)
  • • Use as a basis for improvisation