D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale
Reviewed for accuracy · Last updated June 2026 · Maintained by Justin Evans
Practice D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale
Reading about it is one thing. Drilling it is what makes it automatic.
Introduction

The D Major b6 Pentatonic scale contains five notes: D, E, F♯, A, and B♭. It follows the whole-step / half-step pattern W-W-m3-H-A2.
D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale Notes
| Degree | Name | Note | Interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Root | D | P1 |
| 2 | Major 2nd | E | M2 |
| 3 | Major 3rd | F♯ | M3 |
| 5 | Perfect 5th | A | P5 |
| ♭6 | Minor 6th | B♭ | m6 |
| 8 | Octave | D | P8 |
Key Signature
The notes of the D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale come from D Major, so it carries that key signature: 2 sharps (F♯, C♯).
Written as accidentals
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.
Mnemonic: Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle
D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale — Frequently Asked Questions
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What does the D Major b6 Pentatonic Scale sound like?
Related Tools
References & Further Reading
How this scale page is sourced & verified
The note names, intervals, fingering, and harmony on this page are drawn from the established body of Western music theory and verified against the conventions below — the same fundamentals taught in conservatories and music programs. We list categories of source material rather than individual titles, and reference the standards themselves rather than any single edition.
- Standard music theory texts — Widely taught fundamentals of pitch, rhythm, and notation.
- Western tonal harmony conventions — Established rules for chord construction, voice leading, and key relationships.
- Interval and chord construction standards — The conventional spelling of intervals, triads, sevenths, and extensions.
- Scale and mode theory — The common derivation of major, minor, pentatonic, blues, and modal scales.
- Piano pedagogy and technique references — Long-standing practices for fingering, hand position, and practice.
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