A Natural Minor Scale

    Sad, melancholic scale

    ABCDEFG
    A Natural Minor Scale
    Sad, melancholic scale
    EBGDAE654321123456789101112FF#GG#AA#BCC#DD#EFCC#DD#EFF#GG#AA#BCG#AA#BCC#DD#EFF#GG#D#EFF#GG#AA#BCC#DD#A#BCC#DD#EFF#GG#AA#FF#GG#AA#BCC#DD#EF
    Root
    Chord
    Scale
    Secondary
    Other
    13
    620
    1.0
    0.71.5

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    What is the A Natural Minor Scale?

    The natural minor scale (also called Aeolian) is the major scale started from its 6th degree. It's seven notes spaced in the pattern W-H-W-W-H-W-W, which gives it a darker, more melancholy character than the major scale. Every minor-key song that doesn't borrow notes from harmonic or melodic minor is using natural minor.

    Notes in the scale: A – B – C – D – E – F – G

    Intervals: Root, 2, b3, 4, 5, #5, b7 (measured from the root)

    Parent key: A minor — shares the same seven notes

    Progressions where the A Natural Minor Scale fits

    i-VI-III-VII — in A minor

    Am → F → C → G

    i-iv-v — in A minor

    Am → Dm → Em

    When to use the A Natural Minor Scale

    A Natural Minor Scale shares all seven notes with C major — the same key centred on A. Use natural minor for any minor-key song that wants its sad/dark color without the leading-tone tension of harmonic minor or the bright 6th of Dorian. It's the default for indie, alt-rock, folk-minor and any pop song in a minor key. The natural minor of any root shares its seven notes with the major scale a minor 3rd up (A minor = C major) — you can think of it as the same key with a different home note.

    A chords that work with this scale
    Chords in the key of A minor
    Other A scales
    Natural Minor Scale in other keys
    Chords & guides for this scale

    A Minor Chord

    Root chord for this scale

    Blues Improvisation

    Master blues soloing

    A Natural Minor Scale FAQ

    Practice with Improvisio

    See how the A Natural Minor Scale works over chord progressions.

    Try it in the trainer