A locrian scale
b2 and b5 — the darkest mode. Rare as a tonic, used over half-diminished chords.
Notes: A · Bb · C · D · Eb · F · G
notation
octave:
voice:
About the A locrian scale
The A locrian scale has 7 notes: A, Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G. b2 and b5 — the darkest mode. Rare as a tonic, used over half-diminished chords.
[Placeholder — practice perspective goes here: what songs use this scale, how it relates to the chord harmony it lives over, fingering and technique notes, improvising approaches. Written by a working musician, not generated.]
Common questions
What notes are in the A locrian scale?+
The A locrian scale contains: A, Bb, C, D, Eb, F, G.
How is the A locrian scale built?+
It's built from these intervals above the root: 0, 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 10 semitones.
What does the A locrian scale sound like?+
[Placeholder. b2 and b5 — the darkest mode. Rare as a tonic, used over half-diminished chords.]
When would I use the A locrian scale?+
[Placeholder — common harmonic contexts, chords it pairs with, song examples.]
What chords come from the A locrian scale?+
[Placeholder — diatonic chord stack derived from the scale degrees.]
Is this the same as the A major scale?+
[Placeholder — explain the relationship between parallel scale modes.]
Can I use this scale on guitar?+
[Placeholder — yes. Common fingerings differ from piano; a fretboard view is coming.]
Is the visualization at concert pitch?+
Yes. The piano roll and staff show concert pitch (A4 = 440 Hz reference).