F# Mixolydian Mode

Notes in the F# Mixolydian Mode

Degree Name Note Frequency (A=440)
1 Tonic F# 369.994 Hz
2 Supertonic G# 415.305 Hz
3 Mediant A# 466.164 Hz
4 Subdominant B 493.883 Hz
5 Dominant C# 277.183 Hz
6 Submediant D# 311.127 Hz
♭7 Subtonic E 329.628 Hz

Interval Pattern

Formula: W-W-H-W-W-H-W
Step Interval Semitones From Note To Note
1 Whole Step (W) 2 F# G#
2 Whole Step (W) 2 G# A#
3 Half Step (H) 1 A# B
4 Whole Step (W) 2 B C#
5 Whole Step (W) 2 C# D#
6 Half Step (H) 1 D# E
7 Whole Step (W) 2 E F#

Chords Built on Scale Degrees

Degree Note Chord Quality
1 F# F# major
2 G# G# minor minor
3 A# A# diminished diminished
4 B B major
5 C# C# minor minor
6 D# D# minor minor
♭7 E E major

Key Signature

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

F# Mixolydian Mode in Practice

The F# Mixolydian Mode uses the key signature of 6 sharps (F#, C#, G#, D#, A#, E#). F# major has six sharps and is enharmonically equivalent to Gb major. It is used when a sharp key is preferred over the flat alternative in notation. On guitar, F# positions offer open-string resonance for fingering positions for this scale.

The Mixolydian mode is like a major scale with a flat 7th, giving it a bluesy, rock quality. It appears in rock, blues, folk, and Celtic music and is essential for dominant chord improvisation.

Tuning Frequencies Across Temperaments

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

Note Equal Temp. Pythagorean Just Intonation
F# 369.994 Hz 371.251 Hz 367.911 Hz
G# 415.305 Hz 417.657 Hz 418.601 Hz
A# 466.164 Hz 463.538 Hz 470.926 Hz
B 493.883 Hz 495.000 Hz 490.548 Hz
C# 277.183 Hz 278.437 Hz 279.067 Hz
D# 311.127 Hz 309.026 Hz 313.951 Hz
E 329.628 Hz 330.001 Hz 327.032 Hz

Related Scales

Guitar: F# Mixolydian Mode Positions

The F# key offers 6 sharps (F#, C#, G#, D#, A#, E#) on guitar. Sharp-side keys like F# are idiomatic guitar keys because open strings (E, A, D, G, B, E) align with the scale's natural resonance points.