E Minor Pentatonic Scale

Notes in the E Minor Pentatonic Scale

Degree Name Note Frequency (A=440)
1 Tonic E 329.628 Hz
♭3 Minor Mediant G 391.995 Hz
4 Subdominant A 440.000 Hz
5 Dominant B 493.883 Hz
♭7 Subtonic D 293.665 Hz

Interval Pattern

Formula: W+H-W-W-W+H-W
Step Interval Semitones From Note To Note
1 Aug 2nd (WH) 3 E G
2 Whole Step (W) 2 G A
3 Whole Step (W) 2 A B
4 Aug 2nd (WH) 3 B D
5 Whole Step (W) 2 D E

Chords Built on Scale Degrees

Degree Note Chord Quality
1 E E (complex) other
♭3 G G (complex) other
4 A A (complex) other
5 B B (complex) other
♭7 D D (complex) other

Key Signature

4 — The E key signature uses F#, C#, G#, D#.

E Minor Pentatonic Scale in Practice

The E Minor Pentatonic Scale uses the key signature of 4 sharps (F#, C#, G#, D#). E major has four sharps and a powerful, resonant sound particularly suited to guitar. It is one of the most common keys in rock and blues music. On guitar, E positions offer open-string resonance for fingering positions for this scale.

The minor pentatonic scale is the most commonly used scale in blues and rock music. It contains five notes with a raw, expressive sound ideal for improvisation.

Tuning Frequencies Across Temperaments

Frequencies shown at A=440 Hz. View full temperament data for any note.

Note Equal Temp. Pythagorean Just Intonation
E 329.628 Hz 330.001 Hz 327.032 Hz
G 391.995 Hz 391.111 Hz 392.438 Hz
A 440.000 Hz 440.000 Hz 436.043 Hz
B 493.883 Hz 495.000 Hz 490.548 Hz
D 293.665 Hz 293.332 Hz 294.329 Hz

Related Scales

Guitar: E Minor Pentatonic Scale Positions

The E key offers 4 sharps (F#, C#, G#, D#) on guitar. Sharp-side keys like E are idiomatic guitar keys because open strings (E, A, D, G, B, E) align with the scale's natural resonance points.