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Piano Scale Reference

Explore piano scales visually and by ear.

C Major (Ionian)

The familiar bright, resolved sound of most pop and folk melodies.

C · D · E · F · G · A · B

Cyan keys belong to the scale; the brightest key is the root. Click any key to hear it.

Notes & intervals

  • 1. CRoot
  • 2. DMajor 2nd
  • 3. EMajor 3rd
  • 4. FPerfect 4th
  • 5. GPerfect 5th
  • 6. AMajor 6th
  • 7. BMajor 7th
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How to use Piano Scale Reference

What this tool does

This piano scale reference shows you any scale visually and lets you hear it. Choose a root note and a scale type, and the tool highlights every note of that scale across an interactive piano keyboard. Beside the keyboard it lists the note names in order along with the interval each one forms with the root — the theory behind the colour. Click any key to hear that note, or press Play scale to hear the whole scale run from the root up to the octave.

It covers the scales musicians use most: the major scale and all three minor scales — natural, harmonic and melodic — the seven modes, the major and minor pentatonics, and the blues scale. Every pattern is standard, public-domain music theory, defined as a sequence of semitone steps from the root, so the tool can build the scale on any of the twelve notes.

When you would use it

Students use it to learn what notes a scale contains and to check their homework — to see at a glance which black keys fall in F sharp major, or which notes make up E natural minor. Songwriters and improvisers use it to find a palette of notes that will sound good together over a chord or a key, and to explore the different flavours the modes offer. Guitarists and other players use the piano layout as a clear map of a scale’s shape before transferring the notes to their own instrument. Teachers use it in lessons as a visual aid that also plays the sound, reinforcing the link between the written pattern and the ear.

How to use it

  1. Pick a root note from the menu — this is the note the scale is built on and named after.
  2. Choose a scale type: major, one of the minor scales, a mode, a pentatonic or the blues scale.
  3. Look at the keyboard. The cyan keys belong to the scale and the brightest key is the root.
  4. Click any highlighted key to hear that single note.
  5. Press Play scale to hear the full scale ascend from the root to its octave.
  6. Read the notes-and-intervals list to see each scale degree and the interval it forms with the root.

How to read the result

The keyboard shows the scale as a shape — the pattern of gaps between the lit keys is what gives each scale its character. The major scale follows the familiar whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half pattern; minor scales lower certain steps to sound darker. The interval list names each degree: root, major second, minor third and so on. Those interval names stay the same no matter which root you choose, so once you recognise a scale’s pattern you can build it anywhere. Comparing two scales side by side — major against its parallel minor, or one mode against another — is the quickest way to hear what a single changed note does to the mood.

To hear a scale played in strict time, set the metronome and play along on your own instrument. The note frequency reference gives the exact pitch of each note, and the guitar tuner makes sure your instrument is in tune before you practise. Use the Pomodoro timer to structure scale practice into focused blocks, and the audio trimmer to clip recordings you are studying.

Privacy

Every note you hear is synthesised live by the Web Audio API in your browser; there are no sound files and nothing is recorded. The tool does not use your microphone, contacts no server, and saves nothing between visits — your chosen root and scale exist only while the page is open. The music theory itself is bundled into the page, so the reference works fully offline once loaded. Everything runs on your own device.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between the three minor scales?
All three share the same minor character but treat the upper notes differently. Natural minor is the plain minor scale, with a lowered third, sixth and seventh. Harmonic minor raises the seventh back up, creating a strong leading tone and a distinctive wide gap before the root — a tense, dramatic colour heard in classical and metal alike. Melodic minor raises both the sixth and the seventh on the way up, which smooths the climb to the root for melodies. Pick each one in the scale menu and play it to hear the contrast clearly.
What are the modes, and how are they related to the major scale?
The seven modes — Ionian, Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, Mixolydian, Aeolian and Locrian — are the major scale started from each of its seven notes. Ionian is the major scale itself and Aeolian is the natural minor. The others sit between bright and dark: Lydian is even brighter than major thanks to its raised fourth, while Phrygian and Locrian are darker than minor. This tool treats each as a pattern of intervals from a root, so you can build, say, D Dorian directly and see and hear its shape.
Why do the keys show both sharp and flat names?
Every black key on a piano has two names — F sharp is the same key as G flat, for example — and which name is correct depends on the musical context of the scale. To keep the keyboard uncluttered, this reference labels notes with sharps, the more common choice for many keys. The interval list beside the keyboard shows the scale degree of each note, which is the part that truly matters for understanding the scale's structure, regardless of how a note is spelled.
Is any sound recorded or sent to a server?
No. When you click a key or press Play scale, the note is synthesised on the spot by the Web Audio API inside your browser — there is no audio file and no recording. The tool does not use your microphone and never contacts a server. Your chosen root and scale exist only in the open page and are gone when you close the tab. Everything, from the music theory to the sound, runs entirely on your own device.
Can I use this for instruments other than piano?
Yes. A scale is the same set of notes whatever instrument plays it, so the note names and intervals shown here apply equally to guitar, bass, voice, wind and string instruments. The piano keyboard is simply the clearest way to see a scale's shape, because its layout makes the pattern of whole steps and half steps visible at a glance. Once you know the notes, transfer them to your own instrument's fingering.

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