G Blues scale on piano

bluesy · earthy · expressive

Root 3rd · 5th Passing

About the Blues scale

Minor pentatonic plus one chromatic passing note — the 'blue note' between the 4th and 5th. That in-between pitch is the genre's whole expressive heart.

When to use it: Blues, rock and anything that needs grit. Bend into the blue note, don't sit on it.

Watch out: Sustaining the blue note — it's a passing color, not a resting place.

Notes

G A# C C# D F

Genres

Blues
99%
Rock
85%
Soul
85%

Diatonic chords — tap any of them

These chords are built using only the notes of this scale — one on each degree. That's why they all sound "at home" together: they're the harmonic family of G Blues.

Gsus4 sus4 tonic
A#m minor subdominant
Csus2 sus2 suspended
Dq quartal modal

Frequently asked questions

What notes are in the G Blues scale?

The G Blues scale contains the notes G, A#, C, C#, D, F. On this page you can see them highlighted on the instrument and hear how the scale sounds.

What does the Blues scale sound like?

Every scale has its own color. Blues is best experienced by ear — press play above to hear G Blues and watch each note light up.

Which chords can I build from G Blues?

The diatonic chords of G Blues include Gsus4, A#m, Csus2, Dq. They all share the scale's notes, which is why they sound at home together.