F# Major Pentatonic Scale
Happy, simple 5-note scale
What is the F# Major Pentatonic Scale?
The major pentatonic is the major scale with the 4th and 7th degrees removed — five notes (root, 2, 3, 5, 6) that keep all the bright, consonant intervals and skip the two notes most likely to create dissonance with the chord. The result is a sweet, open scale that sits at the heart of country, gospel, classic rock and any genre that prizes melodic clarity over harmonic complexity.
Notes in the scale: F# – G# – A# – C# – D#
Intervals: Root, 2, 3, 5, 6 (measured from the root)
Parent key: F# major — shares the same seven notes
Progressions where the F# Major Pentatonic Scale fits
I-V-vi-IV — in F# major
F# → C# → D#m → B
I-IV-V — in F# major
F# → B → C#
When to use the F# Major Pentatonic Scale
F# Major Pentatonic Scale shares its five notes with D# minor pentatonic and sits brightly over F# major progressions. Use the major pentatonic over major-key progressions, especially country, gospel, southern rock, classic rock and folk. The same five notes are the relative minor pentatonic at the 6th degree (e.g. C major pentatonic and A minor pentatonic share all five notes), so guitarists often switch between the two by shifting the perceived 'root' rather than the shape.
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See how the F# Major Pentatonic Scale works over chord progressions.
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