A♭ Chromatic
All 12 semitones, in order. Used for chromatic passing tones and modern jazz / classical lines.
Playback sounds an octave below the written notation — the instrument's concert (sounding) pitch.
Audio source: synthesised in-browser via Tone.js (MIT)
What notes are in the A♭ Chromatic scale?
The A♭ Chromatic scale uses the notes A♭, A, B♭, B, C, D♭, D, E♭, E, F, F♯, G (one octave; the pattern repeats at higher registers).
What's the Chromatic scale formula?
The Chromatic scale follows the interval pattern H H H H H H H H H H H H, where W = whole step (2 semitones) and H = half step (1 semitone). Apply that pattern starting on A♭ to get the A♭ Chromatic scale.
What chords work over A♭ Chromatic?
Try chord pairings derived from the scale's third, fifth, and seventh degrees as roots — they share the most diatonic notes.
How do I finger A♭ Chromatic on Double Bass?
On bowed strings, scales train both fingering and bow technique. First-position fingerings cover most scales up to one octave; second-, third-, and fourth-position shifts unlock the higher register. The 1-2-3-4 finger pattern adapts to the half-step + whole-step positions per scale.
When would I use the Chromatic scale?
All 12 semitones, in order. Used for chromatic passing tones and modern jazz / classical lines.