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G♭ Minor Scale

Also Known As
G♭ Aeolian Mode →
What are Enharmonics?G♭ / F♯ Equivalent

Hear the G♭ Minor Scale played for you.

G♭ – A♭ – B𝄫 – C♭ – D♭ – E𝄫 – F♭ – G♭
Right Hand Fingering:1 – 3 – 5
Left Hand Fingering:5 – 3 – 1
Formula:W-H-W-W-H-W-W
Intervals:P1-M2-m3-P4-P5-m6-m7-P8
Scale Degrees:1-2-b3-4-5-b6-b7-8

Introduction

G♭ Minor Scale on the piano — Notes: G♭ – A♭ – B𝄫 – C♭ – D♭ – E𝄫 – F♭ – G♭
G♭ Minor Scale on the piano

The G♭ Minor scale contains seven notes: G♭, A♭, B𝄫, C♭, D♭, E𝄫, and F♭. It follows the whole-step / half-step pattern W-H-W-W-H-W-W.

The Gb Minor scale is a diatonic minor scale that consists of eight notes: Gb, Ab, Bbb, Cb, Db, Ebb, and Fb (returning to Gb). It follows the minor scale step pattern of W-H-W-W-H-W-W and contains two flats. It is closely related to the Gb Minor chord. Like all minor scales, it has a darker, more emotional character widely used across classical, pop, and jazz music.

G♭ Minor Scale Notes

DegreeNameNoteInterval
1TonicAP1
2SupertonicDM2
b3MediantEm3
4SubdominantC♭P4
5DominantG♭P5
b6SubmediantA♭m6
b7Leading ToneD♭m7
8OctaveG♭P8

How to Play the G♭ Minor Scale

Practice the G♭ Minor Scale hands separately at a slow, steady tempo before putting them together. Aim for even rhythm and a relaxed wrist — the goal is a smooth, connected line where every note sounds the same length and volume. Once both hands feel comfortable on their own, layer them at the same slow tempo and only speed up when the joined version is clean.

Right Hand (RH)

Place your right hand over the keys with the thumb on the root. Use the fingering: 1-3-5 1 = thumb, 2 = index, 3 = middle, 4 = ring, 5 = pinky.

Step123
NoteGbAbBbbCbDbEbbFb
Finger135

Left Hand (LH)

For the left hand, start with your pinky on the root. Use the fingering: 5-3-1

Step123
NoteGbAbBbbCbDbEbbFb
Finger531

Practice routine

  1. One octave, ascending only, right hand alone — slow and even.
  2. One octave, ascending and descending, right hand alone.
  3. Repeat steps 1–2 with the left hand alone.
  4. Hands together, ascending and descending, at the same slow tempo.
  5. Two octaves hands together once step 4 feels comfortable.
  6. Increase the tempo only when the previous tempo is fully clean.

Key Signature

The key of Gb Minor (enharmonically equivalent to F# Minor) has 3 sharps.

F♯C♯G♯

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

Chords in the Key of Gb Minor Scale

These are the diatonic triads built on each degree of the G♭ Minor Scale:

C
D
E
F
G
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
A
B
iG♭ Minor (minor)
DegreeNumeralChordQuality
1iGb MinorMinor
2ii°Ab DiminishedDiminished
3IIIA MajorMajor
4ivB MinorMinor
5vDb MinorMinor
6VID MajorMajor
7VIIE MajorMajor

G♭ Minor Scale — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the Gb Minor Scale?
The Gb Minor Scale (natural minor) contains seven notes: F# G# A B C# D E — plus the octave. It has enharmonic with F# minor. The natural minor scale follows the pattern W–H–W–W–H–W–W, giving it a darker, more melancholic character than the major scale.
What is the fingering for the Gb Minor Scale?
Right hand: 23123124 (1=thumb, 2=index, 3=middle, 4=ring, 5=pinky). Left hand: 43213214. Practice each hand separately first, paying close attention to thumb crossings, before combining both hands in parallel motion.
What is the relative major of Gb/F# Minor?
The relative major of Gb/F# Minor is A Major. They share the same key signature and the same seven notes — the tonal centre shifts up a minor third (or down a major sixth) to reach the relative major. A Major Major begins on the 3rd degree of the Gb/F# Natural Minor scale.
What is the difference between natural, harmonic, and melodic minor?
Natural minor uses the basic scale pattern (W–H–W–W–H–W–W). Harmonic minor raises the 7th degree by one semitone to create a stronger leading tone to the tonic. Melodic minor (ascending) raises both the 6th and 7th degrees for smoother upward movement, then reverts to natural minor when descending. The Gb Minor Scale page covers natural minor.
What chords come from the Gb Minor Scale?
The seven diatonic chords built from the Gb Minor Scale are: i minor (tonic), ii diminished, III Major, iv minor, v minor (or V Major from harmonic minor), VI Major, and VII Major. These chords form the harmonic foundation of all music in Gb/F# Minor.
How does the Gb Minor Scale differ from the Gb/F# Major Scale?
Gb/F# Minor has a flattened 3rd, 6th, and 7th compared to Gb/F# Major. These three lowered notes (the minor 3rd in particular) are what give the minor scale its characteristic dark, emotional quality. The root, 2nd, 4th, and 5th are the same in both scales.

Practice Tips

  • Play F# with the right hand alone, one octave slowly — listen for equal tone on every note including the half steps.
  • Mark the half steps in the scale (between degrees 2–3 and 5–6): play these pairs separately to feel the minor scale's characteristic intervals.
  • Use a metronome at 60 BPM. Increase only when you can play cleanly without rushing the thumb crossings.
  • Learn the Gb/F# Minor chord (F#–A–C#) after the scale — connecting scale to chord solidifies muscle memory.
  • Practise the Gb Minor Scale in contrary motion (both hands from the middle outward) to develop evenness across both hands.
  • Compare Gb/F# Minor with A Major Major: they share all the same notes. Play A Major Major then shift to Gb/F# Minor to hear how the same notes create a completely different mood.

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.