fuaranScale Mastery

← D♭ Major on Guitar

D♭ Major — In Octaves

Scales played in octaves are the Wes Montgomery signature technique — each scale tone is voiced simultaneously with itself one octave above. The wide harmonic interval gives the line a rich, hollow-bodied tone and is a foundational drill for jazz soloing and chord-melody arranging on guitar.

Engraved by Verovio 6.2.0-43f8060 3 title D♭ Major — In Octaves
Engraved by Verovio 6.2.0-43f8060 2 3 4 5 title D♭ Major — In Octaves
Verovio
Tempo120 bpm

Playback sounds an octave below the written notation — the instrument's concert (sounding) pitch.

Audio source: tonejs-instruments by Nick Brosowsky (MIT)

Related scales

RelativeB♭ Natural MinorSame seven notes, tonic on the 6th degree — your access to the related minor key.ParallelD♭ Natural MinorSame tonic, the parallel minor — the deepest mode flip in tonal music.Up a fifthA♭ MajorOne sharp brighter on the circle of fifths.Up a fourthG♭ MajorOne flat darker on the circle of fifths.One note differentD♭ LydianRaise the 4th — the bright, floating Lydian colour.One note differentD♭ MixolydianLower the 7th — folk, blues-rock, Celtic vocabulary.SubsetD♭ Pentatonic MajorFive notes from the same scale — the bedrock pentatonic.ExoticD♭ Harmonic MajorBorrow the ♭6 from minor — operatic edge, IV / iv6 colour.

Same presentation in other keys