Interactive Circle of Fifths
This collection features the most commonly used guitar scales that will help you understand music better, build melodies, improvise, and create expressive solos. These scales form the foundation of most music styles — from blues and rock to jazz and classical.
The scale list is empty
Major with #4 from note “A”. Airy floating top, cinematic pedals and open strings.
Bright and stable major scale from note “A”. Foundation of tonal music, easily fits classical progressions.
Dominant major from note “A”. Drive, bluesy flavor and natural pull to tonic.
Minor with natural 6 from note “A”. Flexible, modern sound, keeps modal flavor and groove.
Lyrical natural minor from note “A”. Expressive in ballads and cinematic drama, familiar minor turns.
Minor with b2 from note “A”. Dense tension and ethnic touch, fits riffs and flamenco colors.
Rare center with diminished fifth from note “A”. Tense color, often used as passing effect.
Minor with leading 7 from note “A”. Modern jazz flavor and rich modal derivatives.
V7alt from note “A”. Full of colors (#9/b9/#5/b5) with strong pull to resolution.
V7#11 from note “A”. Major base with spicy #4 and b7, fits extended dominants.
Minor with major 7 from note “A”. Bright cadences and an eastern melodic flavor.
HM5 from note “A”. Minor dominant with b2 and major 3, flamenco character.
Octatonic H-W from note “A”. Symmetry and resource for dominant tensions.
Octatonic W-H from note “A”. Diminished structures and altered dominants.
Six-tone whole-tone scale from note “A”. Smooth flow, augmented triads.