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Scale · Reference entry

D# Major Blues Scale

Major Blues Scale · D♯-F-F♯-G-A♯-C♯ · intervals P1-M2-m3-M3-P5-M6

The D# Major Blues Scale contains the notes D♯, F, F♯, G, A♯, and C♯. Its step pattern is W-H-H-A-W-A. The major pentatonic plus the flat 3rd — adds bluesy bend and tension to a bright major sound.

At the keyboard

B# · D# · F · F# · G · A#
Flashcards · Scale
Three questions on D# Major Blues Scale
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The D♯ Major Blues scale contains six notes: D♯, F, F♯, G, A♯, and C♯. It follows the whole-step / half-step pattern W-H-H-A-W-A.

Enharmonic equivalent: D♯ is enharmonically equivalent to E♭. See Eb Major Blues Scale Scale.

D# Major Blues Scale Notes

DegreeNameNoteInterval
1RootD♯P1
♭♭3Diminished 3rdFM2
♭3Minor 3rdF♯m3
♭4Diminished 4thGM3
5Perfect 5thA♯P5
♭7Minor 7thC♯M6

Key Signature

The D# Major Blues Scale doesn’t line up with a single major or minor key, so it has no standard key signature. Its notes are written with accidentals as needed.

Accidentals

D♯F♯A♯C♯

D# Major Blues Scale — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the D# Major Blues Scale?
The D# Major Blues Scale has six notes: D# F G A Bb C (plus the octave). It is the D#/Eb Major Pentatonic Scale with one added note — the b3 (blue note). This extra note gives the major blues scale its characteristic warm, soulful quality while retaining the major scale's brightness.
What is the blue note in the D# Major Blues Scale?
The blue note in the major blues scale is the b3 — a flatted third that sits between the 2nd and major 3rd. It creates a slight tension against the major tonality, adding expressiveness and colour without fully moving into minor territory.
How does the D# Major Blues Scale differ from the D#/Eb Minor Blues Scale?
The major blues scale (D# F G A Bb C) is brighter and more resolved-sounding than the minor blues scale (D# F# G# A A# C#). The major blues works best over major chords and major-key progressions, while the minor blues suits minor chords and dominant 7th chords in blues contexts.
What music uses the D# Major Blues Scale?
Major blues scales are common in country, folk-blues, classic rock, and gospel music. They give melodies a warm, soulful quality over major-key chord progressions. Artists like Chuck Berry, Ray Charles, and B.B. King frequently used major blues scales alongside minor blues.
Can I use both D# Major Blues Scale and D#/Eb Minor Blues together?
Yes — mixing major and minor blues scales is a core technique in blues and rock improvisation. This creates the "major/minor ambiguity" that gives blues its expressive depth. A common approach: use minor blues for the I and IV chords, shift to major blues for melodic phrases over the I chord.
How do I practise the D# Major Blues Scale?
Start with the D#/Eb Major Pentatonic (which you may already know) and add the b3 as a passing tone. Practice using it as a brief ornament rather than a landing note. Improvise slowly over a D#/Eb Major chord, using the major 3rd as your primary landing note and the b3 as a grace note approach.

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

    Riemann, Hugo(1896)

    Harmony Simplified (English translation)

    Public domain treatise
  4. 4

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