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
| 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.