fuaranScale Mastery
SCALE · ON TUBA

G♯ Natural Minor

The 'natural' minor — relative minor of the major scale built a minor third lower. Same notes as its relative major, different tonic.

MEIMIDIHumdrum
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Meter:Octave per barCrotchets in 4/4Quavers in 4/4Triplets in 4/4
Engraved by Verovio 6.2.0-43f8060 title G♯ Natural Minor
Engraved by Verovio 6.2.0-43f8060 2 3 title G♯ Natural Minor
Verovio
Tempo120 bpm

Audio source: synthesised in-browser via Tone.js (MIT)

FingeringFollows the scale as it plays — written pitch, matches the staff
G♯1234partial 2
Harmonic seriesTube of the tonic fingering — G♯ sounds partial 2
partial 1 — G♯0 (+0¢)1partial 2 — G♯1 (+0¢)2partial 3 — D♯2 (+2¢)3partial 4 — G♯2 (+0¢)4partial 5 — C3 (-14¢)5partial 6 — D♯3 (+2¢)6partial 7 — F♯3 (-31¢)7-31¢partial 8 — G♯3 (+0¢)8partial 9 — A♯3 (+4¢)9partial 10 — C4 (-14¢)10partial 11 — D4 (-49¢)11-49¢partial 12 — D♯4 (+2¢)12
Related scales
Diatonic chord harmonisation
Same scale, other instruments
Same scale, other tonics
Modes built on this tonic
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Theory reference
Questions
What notes are in the G♯ Natural Minor scale?

The G♯ Natural Minor scale uses the notes G♯, A♯, B, C♯, D♯, E, F♯ (one octave; the pattern repeats at higher registers).

What's the Natural Minor scale formula?

The Natural Minor scale follows the interval pattern W H W W H W W, where W = whole step (2 semitones) and H = half step (1 semitone). Apply that pattern starting on G♯ to get the G♯ Natural Minor scale.

What chords work over G♯ Natural Minor?

Natural minor's diatonic chords: i minor, ii°, ♭III major, iv minor, v minor, ♭VI major, ♭VII major. The minor-v sounds modal; for stronger pull use V (from harmonic minor).

How do I finger G♯ Natural Minor on Tuba?

On brass, scales train embouchure + valve / slide coordination across the partials. Slow practice with a tuner reveals intonation tendencies (e.g., the 5th partial sharp on trumpet).

When would I use the Natural Minor scale?

The 'natural' minor — relative minor of the major scale built a minor third lower. Same notes as its relative major, different tonic.