fretengine

Reference library

G# blues

G# blues 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; m3 = minor-third gap, 3 half steps): m3-W-H-H-m3-W. Six notes, formula (intervals from the root): 1-b3-4-b5-5-b7.

Blues is minor pentatonic with one chromatic addition: the b5 (also called #4), known as the "blue note." That single insertion between 4 and 5 creates the tension-and-release that defines blues melody.

Origin and Relationships

  • Built from minor pentatonic (1-b3-4-5-b7) by adding b5 between 4 and 5. The blues scale is not a mode or a subset -- it is a chromatic expansion of an existing pentatonic scale.
  • Not typically rotated into modes. It functions as a melodic color tool rather than a harmonic system.
  • A major blues scale also exists (1-2-b3-3-5-6) -- major pentatonic with a chromatic b3 added. The two blues scales are complementary: minor blues emphasizes b3-to-b5 darkness, major blues plays on the b3-to-3 major/minor ambiguity.

Harmonic Context

In Roman numeral analysis (uppercase = major, lowercase = minor):

  • i (minor): Natural fit. The b5 adds chromatic tension that resolves to 4 or 5.
  • I7 (tonic as dominant seventh): The classic blues application. In blues, the tonic chord is played as a dominant seventh -- a convention unique to the style. A minor-based scale over this chord produces the characteristic friction between the scale's b3 and the chord's natural 3.
  • IV7: Works across a 12-bar blues. The b5 adds grit wherever it appears.
  • V7: Usable, though the b5 is more tense here. Resolve it quickly toward 4 or 5.

Characteristic Tones

The intervals that give this scale its distinctive sound:

  • b5 (the blue note): The defining addition. Compare to Minor Pentatonic: minor pentatonic has open space between 4 and 5 where blues fills it with chromatic tension. The b5 wants to resolve in either direction, never to linger.
  • b3 (minor third): Inherited from minor pentatonic. Over dominant chords, the friction between b3 and the chord's natural 3 is the heart of blues harmony.

Melodic Applications

The classic blues cell is 4-b5-5 or its reverse -- use the b5 for chromatic approach, not as a resting point. Over a I7-IV7-V7 blues progression, one blues scale covers all three chords. Normally you would match a scale to each chord change, but in blues, the scale's tension notes are style-defining rather than clashing -- b3 against the chord's natural 3 is the sound, not a mistake. Players often combine the blues scale with Mixolydian (1-2-3-4-5-6-b7) over dominant chords, blending minor pentatonic grit with major-scale resolution.

Practice Seeds

Blue note resolution. Play the cell 4-b5-5, then reverse it as 5-b5-4. Internalize the b5 as a tone that always seeks resolution -- this habit separates musical blues phrasing from aimless noodling.

Minor pent comparison. Play minor pentatonic over a dominant seventh chord, then add the b5. Hear exactly what one chromatic note contributes -- focused tension between two stable tones.

Over the full progression. Improvise over a I7-IV7-V7 blues using only the blues scale. Notice how one scale works across all three changes without transposition -- this builds confidence in the scale's versatility and trains your ear to hear blues tension as intentional.

Target chord tones. Build phrases that land on 1, b3, or 5 after passing through b5. Train your ear to hear the b5 as a bridge to stability, not a destination -- this develops intentional melodic movement.

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.