G# Major Scale
Happy, bright scale
What is the G# Major Scale?
The major scale is seven notes spaced in the pattern whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half (W-W-H-W-W-W-H), starting from the root. It's the reference scale of Western music: every other mode, key signature, chord and interval is named relative to it. When you hear a melody that sounds 'happy' or 'finished', you're almost certainly hearing major-scale notes resolving to the tonic.
Notes in the scale: G# – A# – C – C# – D# – F – G
Intervals: Root, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 (measured from the root)
Parent key: G# major — shares the same seven notes
Progressions where the G# Major Scale fits
I-V-vi-IV — in G# major
G# → D# → Fm → C#
I-IV-V — in G# major
G# → C# → D#
When to use the G# Major Scale
The G# Major Scale gives you the seven notes of the key of G# major: G#, A#, C, C#, D#, F, G. Use the major scale for melodies, solos and improvisation in any major-key song. Each of its seven notes generates a diatonic chord (I, ii, iii, IV, V, vi, vii°), and these chords are the building blocks of every major-key progression. The major scale is also the parent of the major pentatonic (drop notes 4 and 7) and of all seven modes (Ionian through Locrian).
G# Major Chord
Root chord for this scale
G# Major Pentatonic
Simplified major sound
Blues Improvisation
Master blues soloing
Practice with Improvisio
See how the G# Major Scale works over chord progressions.
Try it in the trainer