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Scale · Reference entry

Eb Melodic Minor Scale

Melodic Minor Scale · E♭ – F – G♭ – A♭ – B♭ – C – D – E♭ · intervals P1-M2-m3-P4-P5-M6-M7-P8

scale·/scales/minor/melodic/e-flat/

The Eb Melodic Minor Scale contains the notes E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C, and D.

Notes: E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C, D · Piano keys: E♭ F G♭ A♭ B♭ C D

At the keyboard

D# · F · F# · G# · A# · C · D
Flashcards · Scale
Three questions on Eb Melodic Minor Scale
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The E♭ Melodic Minor scale contains seven notes: E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C, and D. It follows the whole-step / half-step pattern W-H-W-W-W-W-H.

Enharmonic equivalent: E♭ is enharmonically equivalent to D♯. See D# Melodic Minor Scale Scale.

Eb Melodic Minor Scale Notes

DegreeNameNoteInterval
1TonicE♭P1
2SupertonicFM2
♭3MediantG♭m3
4SubdominantA♭P4
5DominantB♭P5
6SubmediantCM6
7Leading ToneDM7
8OctaveE♭P8

Key Signature

The Eb Melodic Minor Scale uses the same key signature as Eb natural minor (its relative major, Gb Major) — 6 flats (B♭, E♭, A♭, D♭, G♭, C♭). The raised 6th and 7th degrees are written as accidentals, not in the signature.

B♭E♭A♭D♭G♭C♭

Written as accidentals

C♮D♮

Order of flats

Flats are added in a fixed order — the reverse of the sharp order. Each new flat key adds the next flat on the list.

BEADGCF

Mnemonic: Battle Ends And Down Goes Charles’ Father

Diatonic Chords in the E♭ Melodic Minor Scale

These are the triads built on each degree of the E♭ Melodic Minor Scale:

C1C2C3C4C5C6C7C8D#F#A#
iE♭ Minor (minor)
DegreeNumeralChordQuality
1iE♭ MinorMinor
2iiF MinorMinor
3III+G♭ AugmentedAugmented
4IVA♭ MajorMajor
5VB♭ MajorMajor
6vi°C DiminishedDiminished
7vii°D DiminishedDiminished

Eb Melodic Minor Scale — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the Eb Melodic Minor Scale?
The Eb Melodic Minor Scale (ascending form) contains: Eb F Gb Ab Bb C D (plus the octave). It raises both the 6th and 7th degrees of Eb Natural Minor. The descending form reverts to natural minor. In jazz, the ascending form is used in both directions and is sometimes called the "jazz minor" scale.
Why does the melodic minor scale have two versions?
Classical theory uses two forms: ascending (with raised 6th and 7th for smooth upward movement) and descending (natural minor for smooth downward movement). In jazz, the ascending form is used in both directions — this single form is called the "jazz melodic minor" and is the standard in contemporary contexts.
How does Eb Melodic Minor differ from Eb Major?
The Eb Melodic Minor Scale is like Eb Major with a lowered 3rd degree. It shares 6 of the 7 notes with Eb Major — only the 3rd is flatted. This gives melodic minor a unique hybrid character: it sounds almost major but with a minor 3rd colouring.
What is the fingering for the Eb Melodic Minor Scale?
Right hand: 31234123. Left hand: 21432132. The melodic minor uses similar fingering to natural minor. Practice the ascending form first, then the descending natural minor form, before combining them into the full classical two-directional scale.
What modes come from the Eb Melodic Minor Scale?
The Eb Melodic Minor Scale generates seven modes, some with important names: Mode 2 (Dorian b2 / Phrygian #6), Mode 4 (Lydian Dominant), Mode 5 (Mixolydian b6), Mode 6 (Locrian #2 / Half-Diminished), and Mode 7 (Altered Scale / Super Locrian). These modes are foundational to modern jazz improvisation.
What music uses the Eb Melodic Minor Scale?
Melodic minor is used in Classical music (Bach, Mozart, Romantic composers), jazz improvisation (especially over minor-major 7th chords and as the source of the altered scale), and in film music. The jazz melodic minor (ascending only) is one of the most important scales in modern harmony.

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

    Hanon, Charles-Louis(1873)

    The Virtuoso Pianist in 60 Exercises

    Public domain treatise
  2. 2

    Jadassohn, Salomon(1883)

    A Manual of Harmony

    Public domain treatise
  3. 3

    Chopin, Frédéric(1832)

    Nocturne in E♭ major, Op. 9 No. 2

    Public domain score
  4. 4

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