Skip to content
piano.org
A piano reference: chords, scales, theory & ear training.
/

Scale · Reference entry

C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale

Major b6 Pentatonic Scale · C♯ – D♯ – E♯ – G♯ – A – C♯ · intervals P1-M2-M3-P5-m6

The C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale contains the notes C♯, D♯, E♯, G♯, and A. Its step pattern is W-W-m3-H-A2. The major pentatonic with the 6th flatted — pairs well with altered dominants in modern jazz.

At the keyboard

C# · D# · E# · G# · A
Flashcards · Scale
Three questions on C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale
Answer on the keyboard, not with buttons. No login required.

The C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic scale contains five notes: C♯, D♯, E♯, G♯, and A. It follows the whole-step / half-step pattern W-W-m3-H-A2.

C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale Notes

DegreeNameNoteInterval
1RootC♯P1
2Major 2ndD♯M2
3Major 3rdE♯M3
5Perfect 5thG♯P5
♭6Minor 6thAm6
8OctaveC♯P8

Key Signature

The notes of the C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale come from C# Major, so it carries that key signature: 7 sharps (F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, E♯, B♯).

F♯C♯G♯D♯A♯E♯B♯

Written as accidentals

A♮

Order of sharps

Sharps are added to a key signature in a fixed order. Each new sharp key adds the next sharp on the list.

FCGDAEB

Mnemonic: Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle

C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale — Frequently Asked Questions

What are the notes of the C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale on piano?
The C♯ Major b6 Pentatonic Scale uses the notes C♯ – D♯ – E♯ – G♯ – A – C♯. Play them in order from the root up to the octave, hands separately first, then together.
What notes are in the C# Major b6 Pentatonic Scale?
The C# Major b6 Pentatonic Scale contains five notes: C# – D# – E# – G# – A. The notes table above shows each note with its scale degree and interval from the root.
How many sharps or flats does C# Major b6 Pentatonic have?
The C# Major b6 Pentatonic Scale carries the key signature of C# Major — 7 sharps: F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, E♯, B♯. The remaining alterations are written as accidentals: A♮.
What is the relative minor of C# Major b6 Pentatonic?
The relative minor of C# Major b6 Pentatonic is A# Minor. Both scales share the same key signature and the same seven notes — the difference is which note feels like "home." That's why a song in C major and a song in A minor look identical on the staff but feel completely different.
What is the parallel minor of C# Major b6 Pentatonic?
The parallel minor of C# Major b6 Pentatonic is C# Minor. "Parallel" means same root, opposite mode — the third, sixth, and seventh are all a half-step lower in the minor version. Modal interchange (borrowing chords from the parallel key) is one of the most useful tricks in pop and jazz writing.
What does the C# Major b6 Pentatonic Scale sound like?
The C# Major b6 Pentatonic Scale has an open, singable sound with no half-steps — common in folk, country, and pop melodies. With only five notes, the pentatonic scale avoids the most dissonant intervals — every note in the scale sounds good against every other, which makes it ideal for soloing.

Related Tools

Circle of FifthsVisualize key relationships, relative minors, and key signatures.Chord FinderLook up any chord — see the notes, hear it, and play along.Practice RoomPlug in a MIDI keyboard and get real-time feedback on every chord and scale.Chord DrillTimed drills to build speed and recognition across all chord types.MIDI MonitorLive MIDI message stream with note names, velocity, and a scrolling staff.

References & Further Reading

The note names, intervals, fingering, and harmony on this scale page are grounded in the following sources. Public domain treatises and scores are linked to their full text; primary data is piano.org's own interval-derived reference dataset — continuously maintained and human-verified, with no fixed publication date.

  1. 1

    Prout, Ebenezer(1889)

    Harmony: Its Theory and Practice

    Public domain treatise
  2. 2

    Goetschius, Percy(1889)

    The Material Used in Musical Composition

    Public domain treatise
  3. 3

    Beethoven, Ludwig van(1802)

    Piano Sonata No. 14 in C♯ minor, Op. 27 No. 2 ("Moonlight"), i

    Public domain score
  4. 4

Spot something that looks off? Use the note form below — corrections are reviewed by hand.

Entry reviewed and maintained by Justin Evans. Corrections are read and applied.Report an error

Corrections

Found an error or omission in this entry? Send a correction — every submission is reviewed.

0 / 1000