fretengine

Reference library

G locrian ♮7

G locrian natural 7 scale

Full collection of scale patterns in the app.

is the guitar toolkit with intelligent tools and visualizations to help you deeply understand the fretboard as one connected system. Learn more →

Construction

Step pattern (W = whole step, H = half step, A = augmented second, 3 half steps): H-W-W-H-W-A-H.

Formula (intervals from the root): 1-b2-b3-4-b5-b6-7.

Locrian nat7 is Locrian (a mode -- 1-b2-b3-4-b5-b6-b7 -- the darkest of the seven diatonic modes) with its b7 raised to a natural 7. That single change introduces an augmented second between b6 and 7 and plants a leading tone inside a scale that otherwise resists resolution.

Origin and Relationships

Locrian nat7 is a synthetic scale -- one not derived from any standard parent scale (major, melodic minor, harmonic minor) but constructed by modifying an existing mode.

  • Base scale: Locrian with the 7th raised from b7 to natural 7. The raised 7th creates the augmented-second gap between b6 and 7 that gives this scale its exotic character.
  • Compare to Locrian: both share b2, b3, b5, and b6, but Locrian has b7 where Locrian nat7 has natural 7. That natural 7 adds a leading tone and the augmented-second interval absent from standard Locrian.
  • Not to be confused with Locrian nat2 (6th mode of melodic minor -- a mode is a scale derived by starting a parent scale from a different degree), which has natural 2 and b7. Compare to Locrian nat2: Locrian nat7 has b2 and natural 7 where Locrian nat2 has natural 2 and b7 -- the opposite modification.

Harmonic Context

  • m(maj7)b5 (a minor chord with a diminished 5th and major 7th): The tonic chord this scale outlines (1-b3-b5-7). A rare voicing -- the major 7th against the b5 creates sharp dissonance that demands careful handling.
  • Diminished quality with leading tone: The b5 keeps the diminished character of Locrian, while the natural 7 pulls toward the octave like a leading tone. These opposing forces give the scale its tension.
  • Color scale: Locrian nat7 sits outside standard functional harmony. It works best as a brief, exotic color over a drone rather than as the basis for extended tonal passages. Think film scoring tension, progressive metal dissonance, or avant-garde jazz -- contexts where a few bars of unsettling color serve the music.

Characteristic Tones

The intervals that give this scale its distinctive sound:

  • 7 (major seventh): The defining modification. Sits one half step below the octave, creating a leading-tone pull that standard Locrian completely lacks. The augmented second from b6 to 7 is the same interval that defines harmonic minor -- it signals exotic character wherever it appears, whether in Phrygian Dominant, harmonic minor, or here.
  • b5 (diminished fifth): Central to the diminished quality. Compare to Locrian: the b5 is shared, but in Locrian nat7 it coexists with a major 7th, producing a min(maj7)b5 sound that is far more dissonant and unusual than Locrian's half-diminished quality.
  • b2 (minor second): Retained from Locrian. Adds harsh, close-interval color against the root.

Melodic Applications

The augmented second between b6 and 7 is the most melodically distinctive motion in this scale -- lean into it. The major 7th provides a leading tone that wants to resolve to the octave, giving phrases a direction that standard Locrian lacks. Use Locrian nat7 sparingly: a few bars of dark, exotic tension over a drone, then resolve elsewhere. The ear accepts it as a passing shadow, not a destination.

Practice Seeds

The leading tone. Play b6-7-1 repeatedly. Hear the augmented second resolve upward through the leading tone -- this three-note motion is the scale's most characteristic sound.

Compare to Locrian. Play both scales from the same root. Hear how the raised 7th increases tension and adds directional pull -- Locrian drifts, Locrian nat7 yearns.

Drone tension. Set a low root note as a drone and play the scale slowly over it, pausing on b5, b6, and 7. Listen for how each degree pulls against the root differently -- the goal is to map the scale's tension points so you can target them deliberately.

The rare chord. Arpeggiate 1-b3-b5-7 slowly. Hear the min(maj7)b5 quality -- the major 7th against the diminished triad creates a sound found almost nowhere else.

The fretboard isn’t one concept at a time — it’s one connected system.

Isolated chord charts and scale pattern catalogues don’t show you how concepts connect. ’s integrated toolkit allows you to view multiple concepts simultaneously on the fretboard to learn relationships visually.