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Scale · Reference entry

A# Harmonic Minor Scale

Harmonic Minor Scale · A♯ – B♯ – C♯ – D♯ – E♯ – F♯ – G♯♯ – A♯ · intervals P1-M2-m3-P4-P5-m6-M7-P8

The A# Harmonic Minor Scale contains the notes A♯, B♯, C♯, D♯, E♯, F♯, and G♯♯. Its step pattern is W-H-W-W-H-A-H. A minor scale with a raised 7th — exotic and tense, the basis of classical minor-key harmony.

At the keyboard

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

Enharmonic equivalent: A♯ is enharmonically equivalent to B♭. See Bb Harmonic Minor Scale Scale.

A# Harmonic Minor Scale Notes

DegreeNameNoteInterval
1TonicA♯P1
2SupertonicB♯M2
♭3MediantC♯m3
4SubdominantD♯P4
5DominantE♯P5
♭6SubmediantF♯m6
7Leading ToneG♯♯M7
8OctaveA♯P8

Key Signature

The A# Harmonic Minor Scale uses the same key signature as A# natural minor (its relative major, C# Major) — 7 sharps (F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯, A♯, E♯, B♯). The raised 7th degree is written as an accidental, not in the signature.

F♯C♯G♯D♯A♯E♯B♯

Written as accidentals

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

Diatonic Chords in the A♯ Harmonic Minor Scale

These are the triads built on each degree of the A♯ Harmonic Minor Scale:

C1C2C3C4C5FC6C7C8A#C#
iA♯ Minor (minor)
DegreeNumeralChordQuality
1iA♯ MinorMinor
2ii°B♯ DiminishedDiminished
3III+C♯ AugmentedAugmented
4ivD♯ MinorMinor
5VE♯ MajorMajor
6VIF♯ MajorMajor
7vii°G♯♯ DiminishedDiminished

A# Harmonic Minor Scale — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the A# Harmonic Minor Scale?
The A# Harmonic Minor Scale contains: A# B# C# D# E# F G## (plus the octave). It is the A# Natural Minor scale with the 7th degree raised by one semitone (to G##). This creates the characteristic augmented 2nd interval between the b6 and the raised 7th.
How does the A# Harmonic Minor Scale differ from A# Natural Minor?
The only difference is the 7th degree: Natural Minor uses b7, while Harmonic Minor raises it to a natural 7th (G##). This raised 7th creates a stronger leading tone that resolves powerfully back to the tonic, and produces the characteristic augmented 2nd (3 semitones) between the b6 and raised 7th.
What is the augmented 2nd and why does it matter?
The augmented 2nd is the 3-semitone gap between the b6 and raised 7th of the harmonic minor scale. In A# Harmonic Minor this falls between F and G##. This unusual interval gives the harmonic minor its exotic, dramatic character — it is common in flamenco, classical music, and Middle Eastern music.
Why is it called the harmonic minor scale?
It is called "harmonic" minor because the raised 7th allows the construction of a major V chord (dominant chord) in a minor key. In A# Minor, the natural V chord would be minor (using b7), but with the raised 7th, V becomes a major chord with a strong tritone tension that resolves back to the i chord — the basis of harmonic progression in minor keys.
What is the fingering for the A# Harmonic Minor Scale?
Right hand: 21231234. Left hand: 21321432. The harmonic minor uses the same fingering as the natural minor scale — the raised 7th does not change finger placement. Practice each hand separately at slow tempo before combining.
What music uses the A# Harmonic Minor Scale?
Harmonic minor scales are used extensively in Classical music (Baroque through Romantic), flamenco, Arabic maqam music, Jewish klezmer, and metal. The A# Harmonic Minor Scale gives a dramatic, almost exotic flavour to melodies and is common in the works of Bach, Beethoven, and Paganini.

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

    George Grove (ed.)(1900)

    A Dictionary of Music and Musicians

    Public domain treatise
  2. 2

    C. P. E. Bach(1753)

    Essay on the True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments

    Public domain treatise
  3. 3

    Hanon, Charles-Louis(1873)

    The Virtuoso Pianist in 60 Exercises

    Public domain treatise
  4. 4

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