Db Melodic Minor Scale
Reviewed for accuracy · Last updated June 2026 · Maintained by Justin Evans
Introduction
Enharmonic equivalent: D♭ is enharmonically equivalent to C♯. See C# Melodic Minor Scale Scale.
Db Melodic Minor Scale Notes
| Degree | Name | Note | Interval |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tonic | D♭ | P1 |
| 2 | Supertonic | E♭ | M2 |
| ♭3 | Mediant | F♭ | m3 |
| 4 | Subdominant | G♭ | P4 |
| 5 | Dominant | A♭ | P5 |
| 6 | Submediant | B♭ | M6 |
| 7 | Leading Tone | C | M7 |
| 8 | Octave | D♭ | P8 |
Key Signature
The Db Melodic Minor Scale uses the same key signature as Db natural minor (its relative major, E Major) — 4 sharps (F♯, C♯, G♯, D♯). The raised 6th and 7th degrees are written as accidentals, not in the signature.
Written as accidentals
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.
Mnemonic: Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle
Diatonic Chords in the D♭ Melodic Minor Scale
These are the triads built on each degree of the D♭ Melodic Minor Scale:
| Degree | Numeral | Chord | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | i | D♭ Minor | Minor |
| 2 | ii | E♭ Minor | Minor |
| 3 | III+ | F♭ Augmented | Augmented |
| 4 | IV | G♭ Major | Major |
| 5 | V | A♭ Major | Major |
| 6 | vi° | B♭ Diminished | Diminished |
| 7 | vii° | C Diminished | Diminished |
Db Melodic Minor Scale — Frequently Asked Questions
What notes are in the Db Melodic Minor Scale?
Why does the melodic minor scale have two versions?
How does Db Melodic Minor differ from Db Major?
What is the fingering for the Db Melodic Minor Scale?
What modes come from the Db Melodic Minor Scale?
What music uses the Db Melodic Minor Scale?
Practice Tips
- Learn the ascending form first: Db Eb Fb Gb Ab Bb C — then learn the descending as natural minor. Classical players use both; jazz players use ascending in both directions.
- Compare Db Melodic Minor with Db Major: only the 3rd is different. Play them back to back to hear the subtle but significant mood shift.
- Use the correct fingering (RH: 23412312) — same pattern as natural minor.
- Practice the ascending form over a Dbm(maj7) chord — melodic minor fits this chord perfectly.
- Explore the modes: the 7th mode of Db Melodic Minor is the altered Altered Scale — one of the most important jazz improvisation tools.
- Listen to how Bach and Mozart use melodic minor in their minor-key works to hear the classical ascending/descending distinction in practice.
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.
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piano.org(2024)
piano.org scale note dataset — 25 scale types × 18 keys, derived from interval construction rules
Primary data
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