Eb Minor Blues Scale
Reviewed for accuracy · Last updated June 2026 · Maintained by Justin Evans
Introduction

Enharmonic equivalent: E♭ is enharmonically equivalent to D♯. See D# Minor Blues Scale Scale.
Eb Minor Blues Scale Notes
| Degree | Name | Note | Interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Root | E♭ | P1 |
| ♭3 | Minor 3rd | G♭ | m3 |
| 4 | Perfect 4th | A♭ | P4 |
| ♯4 | Augmented 4th | A | A4 |
| 5 | Perfect 5th | B♭ | P5 |
| ♭7 | Minor 7th | D♭ | m7 |
Key Signature
The Eb Minor 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
Eb Minor Blues Scale — Frequently Asked Questions
What notes are in the Eb Minor Blues Scale?
What is the blue note in the Eb Minor Blues Scale?
How is the Eb Minor Blues Scale used in music?
What is the difference between the Eb Minor Blues Scale and Eb Minor Pentatonic?
Can I mix the Eb Minor Blues Scale with the major blues scale?
How do I practise the Eb Minor Blues Scale?
Practice Tips
- Learn the Eb Minor Pentatonic first — the blues scale is that scale plus one note (A, the blue note).
- Use the blue note as a passing tone only — slide through it between the 4th and 5th, don't land on it and hold it.
- Improvise over a Eb7 chord using just 3 notes at first: root, b3, and 5th. Add the blue note when those feel solid.
- Listen to blues recordings in Eb and try to identify when the blue note appears — train your ear before your fingers.
- Practice the scale in rhythmic patterns (long-short, short-long) to develop the phrasing feel of blues music.
- Mix major and minor blues notes: play the Eb Minor Blues scale then slip in the major 3rd (natural 3rd) for the classic major/minor blues sound.
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 reflects piano.org's own interval-derived dataset.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
piano.org(2024)
piano.org scale note dataset — 25 scale types × 18 keys, derived from interval construction rules
Primary data
Spot something that looks off? Use the note form below — corrections are reviewed by hand.
Leave a note
Spotted a typo, have a question, or want to add something? We read every note.