Scales · Phrygian Dominant Key of A♯

A♯ Phrygian Dominant Scale on guitar · notes, intervals & diagram

The A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale contains the notes A♯, B, D, D♯, F, F♯, G♯. Phrygian with a major 3rd — the iconic flamenco/Middle-Eastern sound. Major flavour, minor tension.

Standard tuning · 15 frets

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EADGBE 35791215 F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D F F♯ G♯ A♯ B D D♯ F F♯ Root Scale note

Notes & intervals.

# Degree Note
1 1 A♯ root
2 b2 B
3 3 D
4 4 D♯
5 5 F
6 b6 F♯
7 b7 G♯

Sound & use

Phrygian with a major 3rd — the iconic flamenco/Middle-Eastern sound. Major flavour, minor tension.

Flamenco, klezmer, Middle-Eastern music, metal over dominant chords, anything craving a Spanish edge.

Common in: flamenco, klezmer, middle-eastern, metal

Also known as: Spanish Phrygian, Freygish

Try it interactively

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Other scales

Other scales in the key of A♯.

Scale

A♯ Major

Bright, resolved, optimistic — the default sound of Western pop, folk and most children's music.

Scale

A♯ Natural Minor

Melancholy, introspective, serious — but not desperately sad. The classic "minor key" sound.

Scale

A♯ Major Pentatonic

The major scale with the 4 and 7 removed — five notes that "always work" over a major chord. Sweet, melodic, never dissonant.

Scale

A♯ Minor Pentatonic

The scale that built rock and blues. Bluesy, plaintive, and easy to play in five connected positions across the neck.

Scale

A♯ Blues

Minor pentatonic plus the "blue note" (b5). Gritty, vocal, instantly recognisable as the blues.

Scale

A♯ Dorian

Minor with a major 6th — darker than major, warmer than natural minor. Sophisticated, hopeful-melancholy.

Scale

A♯ Phrygian

Minor with a flat 2nd — exotic, Spanish, slightly menacing. The b2 is the defining sound.

Scale

A♯ Lydian

Major with a raised 4th — dreamy, suspended, otherworldly. The sound of film-score wonder.

Scale

A♯ Mixolydian

Major with a flat 7th — bright but bluesy. The "rock major scale".

Scale

A♯ Locrian

The "weird one" — minor with both a flat 2nd and a flat 5th. Restless, dissonant, hard to resolve.

Scale

A♯ Harmonic Minor

Natural minor with a raised 7th — creates the dramatic 1.5-step gap between b6 and 7. Classical, neo-classical, Middle-Eastern flavours.

Scale

A♯ Melodic Minor

Minor scale with a major 6th and 7th going up (jazz/ascending form). Sophisticated, slippery, modern.

Scale

A♯ Hungarian Minor

Two augmented seconds (between b3–#4 and b6–7) give this scale its distinctive Eastern European / Romani drama.

Scale

A♯ Whole Tone

Six equally-spaced notes, no semitones — the symmetrical "dreamlike" scale. No clear tonic; ambiguous and weightless.

Scale

A♯ Hirajoshi

Traditional Japanese pentatonic — austere, contemplative, instantly evocative of koto music.

All keys

Phrygian Dominant scale in every key.

FAQ

About the A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale
on guitar.

What notes are in the A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale?

The A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale contains the notes A♯, B, D, D♯, F, F♯, G♯. The intervals from the root are 1, b2, 3, 4, 5, b6, b7.

Where does the A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale come from?

It's the Phrygian Dominant scale rooted on A♯. Phrygian with a major 3rd — the iconic flamenco/Middle-Eastern sound. Major flavour, minor tension. Flamenco, klezmer, Middle-Eastern music, metal over dominant chords, anything craving a Spanish edge.

How do I practise the A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale on guitar?

Start with the diagram on this page — find the root notes (the orange dots) and play through the pattern slowly, alternating picking. Once the shape is in your hands, set a metronome at around 60 BPM and play it ascending and descending in eighth-notes. Use the free metronome to keep yourself honest.

Which genres use the A♯ Phrygian Dominant scale?

The Phrygian Dominant scale is found across flamenco, klezmer, middle-eastern, metal. The character of the key — A♯ — affects how it feels rather than how it works: a A♯ Phrygian Dominant solo has the same intervals and the same emotional shape as any other Phrygian Dominant solo, just transposed.

Can I print the A♯ Phrygian Dominant fretboard diagram?

Yes. Use your browser's print function (Cmd/Ctrl + P) — the diagram on this page is a vector SVG that prints crisply at any size. Or use the interactive scale generator to export the same diagram as a standalone SVG or PNG file.