G Phrygian Mode
Dark, Spanish-sounding minor mode with flat 2nd
What is the G Phrygian Mode?
Phrygian is the third mode of the major scale — the major scale started from its 3rd degree. Compared to natural minor, Phrygian lowers the 2nd by a half step (b2). That tiny shift creates the unmistakable 'Spanish' color that flamenco, metal and modal jazz use to evoke darkness, mystery or aggression.
Notes in the scale: G – G# – A# – C – D – D# – F
Intervals: Root, b2, b3, 4, 5, #5, b7 (measured from the root)
Parent key: D# major — shares the same seven notes
Progressions where the G Phrygian Mode fits
i-bII (Phrygian half-step) — in G Phrygian
Gm → G#
When to use the G Phrygian Mode
G Phrygian Mode draws its notes from D# major, starting on G. Use Phrygian over any minor progression that opens with a half-step move from the root (e.g. E to F in E Phrygian) — that's the mode's signature sound. Flamenco builds nearly all its melodies from Phrygian; metal uses it for menace ('Symphony of Destruction'); jazz fusion uses it for outside-sounding lines over minor 7 chords.
Blues Improvisation
Master blues soloing
Practice with Improvisio
See how the G Phrygian Mode works over chord progressions.
Try it in the trainer